The intentions of thunder New and selected poems

Patricia Smith, 1955-

Book - 2025

The Intentions of Thunder gathers, for the first time, the essential work from across Patricia Smith's decorated career. Here, Smith's poems, affixed with her remarkable gift of insight, present a rapturous ode to life. With careful yet vaulting movement, these poems traverse the redeeming landscape of pain, confront the frightening revelations of history, and disclose the joyous possibilities of the future. The result is a profound testament to the necessity of poetry--all the careful witness, embodied experience, and bristling pleasure that it bestows--and of Smith's necessary voice.

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Subjects
Genres
poetry
Poetry
Poésie
Published
New York, NY : Scribner, an imprint of Simon & Schuster, LLC 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Patricia Smith, 1955- (author)
Edition
First Scribner hardcover edition
Physical Description
xi, 337 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781668055724
  • Life according to Motown
  • Big towns, big talk
  • Close to death, 1993, Blood dazzler, 2008
  • Uncollected 1990-2010
  • Shoulda been Jimi Savannah
  • Incendiary art, 2017
  • Unshuttered, 2023
  • Uncollected 2010-2024
  • 70.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Smith (Unshuttered) delivers a formidable volume of selected and previously uncollected poems. Performing the work of "desperate remembering," Smith revels in Black joy even as she records the violence committed against Black bodies in the name of white supremacy: "We are the disappeared, desolate, and misplaced,/ dark magicians stronger than any root or conjure." The poet's uncanny ear and powerfully empathic imagination bring to life Black figures, from those who go unnamed in 19th-century photographs to Little Richard and the victims of Hurricane Katrina ("every woman begins as weather"). A bereaved child asks the poet to "undead" her mother, "Replacing the voice./ Stitching on the lost flesh." An undertaker repairs the mutilated corpses of young Black men for the sake of their grieving families: "I have smoothed the angry edges/ of bullet holes. I have touched him in places/ no mother knows, and I have birthed his new face." A pressing question throbs throughout the collection: "can poems save us?" At one point, Smith describes poems as being "only ways to layer music over hurting. Ways to say the quiet things out loud." Elsewhere, she admits, "I really thought the words would grow to gospel in my hands." Readers will find themselves forever changed by Smith's spirited voice. (Sept.)

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