Bluff Poems

Danez Smith

Book - 2024

This collection is a powerful reckoning with violence, shame, and easy pessimism in which Smith relies on artistic resilience to envision futures that seem possible.

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811.6/Smith
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Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor New Shelf 811.6/Smith (NEW SHELF) Due Nov 26, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Poetry
Published
Minneapolis, Minnesota : Graywolf Press 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Danez Smith (author)
Physical Description
146 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
ISBN
9781644452981
  • Anti poetica
  • Ars america (in the hold)
  • On knowledge
  • Less hope
  • It doesn't feel like a time to write
  • [this shadow haunting me again]
  • (don't worry) if there's a hell below, we're all going to go - chopped & screwed
  • Anti poetica
  • Alive
  • "you don't even know me / i'm hanging from a tree"
  • Volta
  • Headed
  • Last Black American Poem
  • 1955
  • Approaching a Sestina on I-94 West
  • Dayton's Bluff
  • Rondo
  • METRO
  • Queen Performing "And I'm Telling You I'm Not Going" in a Blue Dress, Saloon Bar, Minneapolis, 07/2022
  • Dede was the last person i came out to
  • Jesus be a durag
  • I-35W North // Downtown Exits
  • Minneapolis, Saint Paul
  • Relativity
  • Anti poetica
  • Principles
  • Poem
  • Big head
  • I'm not bold, i'm fucking traumatized
  • The Slap
  • Ars america
  • The Joke
  • I miss that negro
  • Love poem outside of
  • Colorado Springs
  • Denver
  • Sioux Falls
  • Stoop poem
  • El Carbonero
  • Two Deer in a Southside Cemetery
  • Elegy in green & blue
  • My Beautiful End of the World
  • But how long into the apocalypse could you go before having to kill some white dude?
  • The end of guns
  • Love poem
  • After & before
  • Sonnet
  • More hope
  • Ars poetica
  • Soon
  • Craft
  • Notes
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Smith's searing fourth collection (after Homie) offers a powerful self-indictment of art and the artist in an age of social and political collapse. Rooted in critical self-awareness in the midst of ongoing racial violence, mass protest, and political division, the poems showcase Smith's growing skepticism toward poetry that is simply performative in its politics or that fails to radically engage with reality: "poetry/ happens, something to do with my hands/ that's not jailtime, why lie tho, i'm a/ coward, a slave to slavery, it makes me a/ salary." In the wake of George Floyd's murder by police, Smith chronicles protests in the Twin Cities, telling readers, "if the cops kill me/ don't grab your pen/ before you find/ your matches." Animated by an insight born of anger, Smith demands an attention to the present as an antidote to a future that seems increasingly unlikely: "love me now./ tomorrow has no face." It's a necessary and challenging jolt to the system. (Aug.)

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