
- 160 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
William Evans, the award-winning poet and cofounder of the popular culture website Black Nerd Problems, offers an emotionally vulnerable poetry collection exploring the themes of inheritances, dreams, and injuries that are passed down from one generation to the next and delving into the lived experience of a black man in the American suburbs today. In We Inherit What the Fires Left, award-winning poet William Evans embarks on a powerful new collection that explores the lived experience of race in the American suburbs and what dreams and injuries are passed from generation to generation. Fall under the spell of Evans's boldly intimate, wise, and emotionally candid voice in these urgent, electrifying poems.This eloquent collection explores not only what these inheritances are composed of, but what price the bearer must pay for such legacies, and the costly tolls exacted on both body and spirit. Evans writes searingly from the perspective of the marginalized, delivering an unflinching examination of what it is like to be a black man raising a daughter in predominantly white spaces, and the struggle to build a home and a future while carrying the weight of the past.However, in beautiful and quiet scenes of domesticity with his daughter or in thoughtful reflection within himself, Evans offers words of hope to readers, proving that resilience can ultimately bloom even in the face of prejudice. Readers of Ta-Nehisi Coates and Hanif Abdurraqib will find a brilliant, fresh new talent to add to their lists in William Evans.
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Information
GRASS GROWING WILD BENEATH US
THE ENGINE
The sun fell out of the window,our daughter caught it with her teeth.Every nightfallis a black they can’t murder.The days my car makes itto the garage are the days I can live forever.Even flattened against the street, an officer’sknee in my back, I look young for my age.They say you can chart time by stargazing orknowing all the stars you see are already dead.If the tops of trees are the newest life, everythingfrom my father’s land looks like the future.When I retrieve the mail, I am remindedof what can outlive me.When I was a boy, we gatheredsticks that resembled bones.We tried to resurrect our ancestors, but they refused.We have given you death once, why would you givethat back?I had a cut above my eye onceand assumed everything I saw was bleeding.The ground is better at giving us namesthan the sky has ever been.
THE TRAIL SAYS THREE POINT ONE MILES
We know how old we are by rememberingour company while we walked this trailthe beginning when there were lessof us jogging and counting the milessweaty and owning our breath we droveto your condo which was still our homeand showered for a long spellpicking the wild from each other thenwhen we were pregnant and you refusedto not finish the trail I was so cautious thenyou would probably never succumb to anythingbut I was brutish and rememberedthis wasn’t your first pregnancyonly the one that had lasted this longlater we brought the stroller becauseshe loved the buzzing air too sometimesshe would run along with you like a second handcatching up to the hour sometimesshe stayed in the stroller while I pushedher up each hill once we saw a deerslowly venturing through the thickhead high as a lighthouse the brush partinglike a royal court the girl sat uponmy shoulders saying daddy daddydaddy until the other deer emergedand there was nothing leftto say we had been here before allof us with the grass growing wildbeneath us
INTERROGATION
The morning has rhythm—wake her up, get dressed, eatbreakfast, brush teeth,shoes on, then the door. It istrue, even if it is still a sprint.Not every morning is made fromGod, so it is left to me to improviseupon the machine. Bringthe clothes downstairs, eat in the caror be ready to pack everythingyou can. She is fully dressed,hoping the morningwill make me forget that sheneeds to brush her teeth. It doesnot. I can’t brush my teeth ifI already have my shoes on.She knows this is nothow logic moves around us,and yet she tries. Not allgulfs will be this easy to bridge.She calls the baseball a footballand I correct her. She saysher grandparents are in heavennow and I say close enough. I neverknow what windows are worthdestroying. She knows that I am Santa.I have driven into the night and returnedwith ice cream at her request thenbetrayed her by smiling about it. Losta game of Connect Four twice. Pretendedto not see her hiding behind the couch.Told her why she will never havea brother. Once we roamed aroundthe woods and watched a deerbeautiful and liquid move amongthe tall grass. The girl’s eyes wideneduntil light came from them. She whisperedeven though the deer knew we werethere. Daddy, it’s so cool, she would say.And I was silent. Smiling, I thought,Did you know some people shoot them?
SOFT PRAYER FOR THE TEETHING
Be it the miracle wounding.Be it the...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Grass Growing Wild Beneath Us
- Trespass
- Aging Out of Someone else’s Dream
- Acknowledgments
- About the Author
- Copyright