Every year this
list grows. Truly we are living in a golden age of American poetry of
provocation and witness!
If you just want a
taste of this kind of knock-out, necessary poetry that Split This Rock cultivates,
teaches, and celebrates, check out the March 2014 issue of POETRY magazine:
all poets who were featured at Split This Rock Poetry Festival that month
(including several with new books, below). You can read the whole thing online here or purchase
a copy.
We invite you to
shop your local independent bookstore, Teaching for Change’s Busboys and Poets Bookstore, or Powells.com for gifts for yourself and all your poetry-loving (and
soon-to-be-poetry-loving) family and friends.
We also know this
list is by no means comprehensive. Please “comment” below to help build the
e-library of essential 2014 books. Thank you!
Sarah Browning
compiled the list this year.
This House, My Bones, Elmaz Abinader (Aquarius
Press)
“[This] new collection sings deep into the bone marrow of
what we fear losing: our witness vein, the maps that help us recoup what we
misplace in the forgetting, and the dead who carry our names.” – Willie Perdomo
Difficult Fruit, Lauren K. Alleyne (Peepal
Tree Press)
“Alleyne’s poems are both sensual and spiritual and
beautifully capture the narrator’s journey into womanhood and her struggle
for self-knowledge.” – Gwarlingo
The Promise of Hope: New and Selected Poems, 1964-2013,
Kofi Awoonor (University
of Nebraska Press)
“[Awoonor’s] poetry is tender, intimate, and at times
indignant… an invaluable collection.” – Portland Book Review
“Zeina Hashem
Beck crafts a multifaceted portrait of the people and the streets of Beirut.
Part love-letter, part elegy, Hashem Beck’s debut collection keeps the
city from becoming ‘a shadow of a memory,/ the memory of a shadow.’” –
John Hennessey
Wen Kroy, Sheila Black (Dream Horse Press)
“These poems speak expertly of desire, difference and
danger. Wen Kroy captures 'all the motley messy details / of
daily life' with spontaneity and verve.” - Jillian Weise
“These poems offer an unlikely kind of hope: Brown's
ambivalence is evidence of a fragile belief in the possibility of change, of
the will that makes change possible.” - NPR
Split, Cathy Linh Che (Alice James Books)
“Che’s brave, rich, and poignant poems link the past and
present while highlighting the pain of memory. Deceivingly simple, yet swelling
with danger, they devastate the heart.” - diaCRITICS
Floating, Brilliant,
Gone, Franny Choi (Write
Bloody Publishing)
“Franny Choi writes with beauty, grace, and an ability to
both console and cut you in the same piece. She is a force in the world of
poetry.” – The
Poetry Question
Day Unto Day, Martha Collins (Milkweed Editions)
“A book-length meditative lyric expedition into the
landscape of love, dissolution, and hanging on, tenaciously, to the fraying
shreds of our battered humanity.” - Mead
“Nothing is left unturned or unexplored by this poet, from
fairytales to tamales, to a spoon, to a simmering pot of menudo; all is fair
game for the poet to deconstruct--brick by brick--that bulwark separating the kitchen
from the artist’s workshop; and history--those mutilated echoes of the
past--from the voices of our own mothers.” –Letras Latinas Blog
Nothing More to Lose, Najwan Darwish, translated by
Kareem James Abu-Zeid (New
York Review Books)
“A collection of very short poems — often no more than a
page — speaking of love, sorrow, loss, hope and despair in a voice
simultaneously so passionate and so matter-of-fact that it stops the breath.” –
NPR
Thieves in the Afterlife, Kendra DeColo (Saturnalia Books)
“A lush, unabashed ode to female desire, pushing the
boundaries of what women are allowed to say.” – Missouri
Review
Seam, Tarfia Faizullah (Crab Orchard Series in
Poetry/Southern
Illinois University Press)
“Why take brutality
head-on, confronting the past where over two hundred thousand Bangladeshi women
were raped in the liberation war? Faizullah’s fierce book of poems stands as
the answer: because power lies in the telling.” – Blackbird
We Didn't Know Any Gangsters, Brian Gilmore (Cherry Castle Publishing)
“Navigates the streets of Washington DC as only a native can, recalling a community of proud men and troubled sons. He invokes the blues, the everyday working Joe, and a sense of hope, painted by the speaker’s survival.” – The Rumpus
“Navigates the streets of Washington DC as only a native can, recalling a community of proud men and troubled sons. He invokes the blues, the everyday working Joe, and a sense of hope, painted by the speaker’s survival.” – The Rumpus
Saudades, José "Joe" Gouveia (Casa Mariposa Press)
“Gouveia turns the quotidian into the universal. A true
poet each day brings the blood of a poem. He can work experience – of love,
death, of family, of childhood, place, and of day-labor – into compelling song.”
– The
Barnstable Patriot
I Am the Beggar of the World: Landays From Contemporary
Afghanistan, Eliza Griswold, translator (Farrar, Straus and Giroux)
“The book’s greatest strength is the complicated spectrum
of voices that it allows these women, whom we wouldn’t otherwise know anything
about. I Am the Beggar casts Pashtun women as vibrantly
self-aware and autonomous.” – The Millions
Somewhere Near Defiance, Jeff Gundy (Anhinga
Press)
“Like two of his poetic influences, William Blake and
Walt Whitman (who each appear in several poems), Gundy is a poet of the people
in that his poems examine everyday life in a way that elevates it to the
sublime.” – Your Impossible
Voice
Habitation: Collected Poems, Sam
Hamill (Lost Horse
Press)
“Sam Hamill is a writer unabashedly taking his place
within the community of literature and the community of all sentient beings—his
fidelity is to the magnificent truth of existence, and to its commensurate
singing.” – Jane Hirshfield
“Hedge Coke makes music from tornados and glyphs, from
cranes spiraling overhead, and from the grumbling stomachs of hungry children.
She sings these stories because she has to and because we need her to.” – Adrian Matejka
Dark. Sweet. New
& Selected Poems, Linda Hogan (Coffee House Press)
“Despite the pain, loss, and frustration that percolate
through her poetry, what’s so remarkable about Dark. Sweet. is
the palpable optimism and unceasing call to change. This is a poet deeply in
love with humanity and the natural world.” – Cleaver
Magazine
Dark-Sky Society, Ailish Hopper (New Issue Poetry & Prose)
“[The poems] move
like legs on a street, like a mind at work that calls you to ruminate with it.
Because we can’t understand everything, we have to be comfortable in that space
of being unsure.” – New
Books in Poetry
Zion, TJ Jarrett (Crab Orchard Series in
Poetry/Southern Illinois University Press)
“These poems are
shaped by a passionate desire to summon mercy and forgiveness in the face of
terrible wrong, and they celebrate, without a trace of sentimentality, the
sustaining power of love.” – Nashville Scene
Prelude to Bruise, Saeed Jones (Coffee House Press)
“There is a core
melody threaded through the collection…, a theme: the story of Boy, a queer
African-American child navigating family, gender and desire in the South. The
result is a tight, complex, glittering work that pulls no punches and dims no
light.” – NPR
Patter, Douglas Kearney (Red
Hen Press)
“Douglas Kearney’s
third book, Patter, uses fracture, fragment, textual abrasion,
repetition, and form to cross-examine marriage, miscarriage, babies, and
infertility. Endlessly inventive, Kearney’s work uses a couple’s anguish to
cut, divide, vivisect, and re-imagine the text and the act of creation.” – The Rumpus
Hustle, David Tomas Martinez (Sarabande
Books)
“In sidelong verses, [Martinez] compacts his childhood in the Meadowbrook Houses in San Diego, his teenage years running with a gang, his enlistment in the Navy, and then his eventual escape into the world of poetry… Perhaps there is no way to make grief into a diamond. But Martinez has made something rare, and living, and glittering nonetheless.” – NPR
“In sidelong verses, [Martinez] compacts his childhood in the Meadowbrook Houses in San Diego, his teenage years running with a gang, his enlistment in the Navy, and then his eventual escape into the world of poetry… Perhaps there is no way to make grief into a diamond. But Martinez has made something rare, and living, and glittering nonetheless.” – NPR
The Heart of a Comet, Pages D. Matam (Write
Bloody Publishing)
“Matam
is not working on the revolution in this book, but on what comes after. He’s
got witness, and complaint, and analysis -- he’s a master of his genre… [The Heart of a Comet] is a model of
becoming the change you want to see, of living as if the
revolution is over and a new world needs building -- now!” – Blog This Rock
The Iraqi Nights, Dunya
Mikhail, translated
by Kareem James Abu-Zeid (New Directions)
“Although the pervasive pain of war on the street, home,
and soul in this collection threaten grief and paralysis, the poet continuously
weaves in visions of a future outside of violence, of a place where ‘every
moment / something ordinary / will happen under the sun.’” – Poetry
New York
Haiti Glass, Lenelle Moïse (City Lights)
“Her poetry embraces everything from her native Haiti, to
the experience of an immigrant child, to Basquiat, to the loss of her uncle to
AIDS. With brilliant control, Moïse pulls taut the wire that transforms pain
into poetry.” – Lambda
Literary Review
The Essential Hits of Shorty Bon Bon, Willie Perdomo
(Penguin
Books)
“As a Nuyorican poet who emerged on the scene in the
1990’s, Perdomo is comfortable in meshing a variety of elements that may have
no business being together but come out clean and intelligible in the end. His
book is a fusion of street culture, life in the halls of learning, dual
languages, dual homes or no home that resulted in a multifaceted life.” – A
Gathering of the Tribes
from unincorporated territory [guma'], Craig Santos Perez (Omnidawn)
“Though he’s a native Chamoru from the Pacific Island of
Guahan (Guam), Perez has not lived there for two decades. He uses a range of
arresting techniques, including presenting excerpts from official documents
with interlinear commentary, to show the cost of historical and ongoing U.S.
militarism and colonization on the island.” – Library
Journal
CITIZEN, Claudia
Rankine (Graywolf)
“Citizen is
a major work of American poetry that… demands to be read and discussed now, in
the current moment, when, in Ferguson and elsewhere, the daily struggles
of black life are being thrown onto a background that is all too white.” – Flavorwire
[insert] Boy, Danez
Smith (YesYes Books)
“The next time
someone tells you spoken word poets can’t make poems come to life on the page,
send them to Danez Smith’s [insert] boy, a remarkable debut
collection that puts that tired notion to bed once and for all. In these poems,
Smith opens the reader to a world of desire, longing, and deep mourning.” – Malicious
Intent
Nude Descending an Empire, Sam Taylor (Pitt Poetry
Series)
“In the face of the
American imperial project, the poems sing every song imaginable – dirge, praise
song, ecstatic chant. The antidote to despair, then, is more – more of the
body, heart, more mystery, fear.” – Sarah Browning
The Fateful Apple, Venus Thrash (Hawkins
Publishing Group)
“Thrash plays out her own duality of self and history and
takes the reader on a journey back to the center, the place we return to when
no more is expected of us.” – New
Books in Poetry
Ten Thousand Waves, Wang Ping (Wings Press)
“The scars of modern China’s land and people are
unflinchingly reproduced on the page with a medical accuracy. The human and
environmental costs of globalization are impossible to discount when presented
with such elegance and artistry.” – Cloud
City Press
Vermeer in Hell,
Michael White (Persea
Books)
“Rarely have I felt the ekphrastic to be as dramatic as
in White’s tour through the portraits of Vermeer, with its history of fiery
damages, wars and afflictions, but also its own depiction of ‘love’s face as it
is.’” – David Baker
3 comments:
I would also recommend California native Robbie Sugg's KOCCHA from Day's Eye Press.
What a wonderful list of poetry books! I can’t wait to begin reading them. I’d like to suggest another book for your list: Teaching with Heart: Poetry that Speaks to the Courage to Teach (Wiley).
Written by teachers for teachers, Teaching with Heart is a collection of iconic poems that inspire, inform, and deepen how teachers think about their everyday work in classrooms and schools. Each poem is introduced by a commentary written by a teacher that taps into the joys and challenges that define what it means to teach. “I wish I could afford to buy copies of Teaching With Heart for all the teachers I have interviewed in my 40 years of reporting. My budget can't handle that. Instead, I recommend that all of us non-teachers buy copies of this inspiring book for teachers we know. You will probably want one for yourself too.” – John Merrow, Education Correspondent, PBS NewsHour, and President, Learning Matters, Inc.
Megan Scribner, co-editor, Teaching with Heart
I can't wait to checkout all those poetry books! Here is my little list:
Her Olives
by Fida Islaih
Hugs & Kisses
by Fida Islaih
Nejma
by Nayyirah Waheed
bone
by Yrsa Daley-Ward
No Matter the Wreckage
by Sarah Kay
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