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Book Review

Bread and Circus / Airea D. Matthews / 2023

Goddamn. Matthews has both childhood trauma and academic poetic muscles at intense levels. There’s a poem where a therapist asks the speaker to talk about a moment she didn’t regret and the speaker talks about helping her father shoot heroin once. I would completely understand it if a poet with this extreme of a memory bank to draw from spent their whole lives writing sobbing confessional poems, just trying to bear witness and heal. Matthews manages to do so much more than that. There are erasure poems of economic theory (Adam Smith and Guy Debord) that make the reader consider the ways the speaker’s womanhood, and in turn the trauma the world has given her, has been commodified and the violence therein. While some of the erasure poems aren’t mindblowing, they do an excellent job of teasing out how violent public systems create these intense personal traumas. To read Bread and Circus is to sit with someone who has extraordinary life experience AND has done an incredible amount of work to contextualize and think critically about it. 4 out of 5. 

I Ching / David Hinton / Ancient to 2015

I Ching / David Hinton / Ancient to 2015


In an effort to familiarize myself with the Eastern canon and Daoism better, I listened to the I Ching. It was dramatically apparent that listening to the I Ching front to back is a wrongheaded approach to engaging with the text. Traditionally, readers roll dice that add up to a hexagram and flip to the corresponding page. Once there, they read a mix of symbols, images, and sometimes didactic, sometimes mysterious aphorisms. In this way, the practice feels like a cousin to tarot. It’s up to interpreters to figure out how to apply the meaning to their own lives. Drawing from the depths of millennia of Chinese culture, the texts frequently uses natural and feudal imagery. It’s also poetry, as in the original Chinese, one line may be read eight different ways, a tool that obviously works brilliantly for an interpretative, fortune-telling text. I prefer this practice to contemporary astrology and tarot, which requires one to either acquire a whole set of new vocabularies to play with or find a charismatic practitioner to really get something interesting. I like the I Ching because it gives me a poem to play with, and since its wisdom is generally Daoist, I typically find something that more or less aligns with my sense of values anyway. In any case, here’s an online version if you are desperate enough to reach towards the supernatural these days: https://www.ichingonline.net/ The I Ching can only get a 5/5, rational thinkers stay mad!

The Gravedigger’s Archeology / William Archila / 2015

The Gravedigger’s Archeology / William Archila / 2015

Another haunting collection by Archila, exploring exile and war through a bluesy voice. This time, Archila employs longer sentences, like a repeated splash of piano keys, that sometimes wash over the reader. It’s harder to pin down this violence, almost like the more one digs the less earth one is standing on. It’s a worthy follow-up to the Art of Exile and fans of that will likely have more to love. 4 out of 5. 

The Communist Manifesto / Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels / 1848


The Communist Manifesto / Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels / 1848

I picked up the Penguin edition, which was front loaded with a ton of critical material that was useful to understanding the reception of the text, the history of its ideas, and Marx and Engels as figures. I skipped the last half of these essays, as I wanted to get to the legendary manifesto already, although after listening to the manifesto, I realized the essays would have served me better and proved more informative. While I can appreciate the manifesto, especially as it lays out its principles, and its biting humor about false socialisms and the bourgeoisie, a lot of its key revolutionary ideas I’ve already encountered updated in other texts. I don’t know if I’m ever going to read Das Kapital, but for now, I’m moving onto Lenin and others in my quest to better understand Marxism. 3 out of 5. 

The Souls of Black Folk / W.E.B. Du Bois / 1903

The Souls of Black Folk / W.E.B. Du Bois / 1903

I’ve read chapters of this book during my degrees and decided I had to return to read the whole thang to understand the Black Radical Tradition better. Du Bois pours his soul into every word of the text, diving between astute economic and historical truth-telling, musical criticism, and personal essays on Atlanta and the lives of everyday Black folk in the Jim Crow south. It’s all the more painful to see Du Bois’s legacy so under-talked about and misrepresented as a mere counterpoint to Booker T. Washington. It was painful to read his chapter on education, which might as well be about contemporary under-funded schools in the US. This round of reading helped really color in the picture of just how fucked the South was economically before and after the Civil War, especially during the Reconstruction period. Du Bois’s thoroughness is so earnest and unearned by this country. Amerikkka did not and does not deserve souls as beautiful as Du Bois. 5/5 

Handbook of Restorative Justice / edited by Gerry Johnstone and Daniel V. Van Ness / 2011 

Handbook of Restorative Justice / edited by Gerry Johnstone and Daniel V. Van Ness / 2011 

I’m so grateful for this book. At over 600 pages, it goes through chapter by chapter tackling critical issues in restorative justice, from its philosophical underpinnings, its history, the rationale of its procedural variations and its evaluative criteria, and more. The wisdom in this book is through the roof and articulated with a clear-eyed thoughtfulness, chapter after chapter. Contemporary pop abolitionists frequently point to the terror of mass incarceration and its impact without adequately drawing a picture of what a world without mass incarceration would look like. Restorative justice has well thought out plans and answers in this regard that, yes, do need more experimentation, but do offer viable alternatives. I especially appreciate its philosophical wrestling with the need for coercion in cases of persistent violence and its focus on the lack of rehabilitative services for victims, as a part of its vision. Beyond the rhetorics of marxism and decolonization, the books on restorative justice that I have read are the ones that have provided me with the greatest sense of clarity and hope about the future I want.  

There’s only two larger shortcomings with this collection I think are worth quibbling with: 1) The first is minor. They include a chapter on Christianity that misses the mark entirely imo, as it spends time going back and forth with different interpretations of the Bible and its forms of justice, losing itself in the debate. This sidesteps what is most interesting about Christianity’s relationship to restorative justice: a) Christians have led the way in many places in developing restorative justice. The authors acknowledge this and use this as justification for including the chapter, but they never talk about WHY that may be the case. My suspicion is that few religions have circled the ideas of sin and forgiveness than Christians. Through Christ, EVERYONE can be forgiven and I think this sincere belief gives ordinary people the strength to do the work of restorative justice. I’m curious how other ordinary people develop this strength, but anyone who spends time in prisons knows that Christians are some of the few people who dedicate themselves to serving the incarcerated. Many of the incarcerated, especially those who have committed heinous crimes, rely on Christianity to survive mass incarceration and forgive themselves. Under extreme duress, many humans reach towards the supernatural, of course. But I am hungry to read something that unpacks the layers here about the role of Christianity for both practitioners of RJ and victims of the system and how ordinary non-Christians can develop some of the muscles that best Christian RJ practitioners seem to have. 

2) There’s a chapter on the role of police in RJ. The authors ultimately conclude that there’s no data that suggests that police participation in RJ is more harmful than not. Just as some folks feel alienated by police, others feel safer, and the authors ultimately conclude that it’ll depend on the community, relationships built therein, and there’s no reason to rule it out entirely. I’m sure they didn’t misread their data, but here’s a place where ideology and the history of policing in the US at large do have tremendous insights and why that isn’t a good idea. The role of police officers and the tools they have would need to be completely reimagined under RJ and it was strange to encounter a chapter that basically opened the door to intersecting with traditional justice systems without challenging some of the fundamental issues of power and relations that exist between community members and traditional police forces. How cool would it have been to have a chapter that used RJ to reimagine what services would exist in lieu of police or how coercion would operate under RJ in necessary situations. 

While not exactly reflected in this little book review, my takeaways were ultimately largely positive and an immense sense of gratitude for having found a community of people approaching the work with the right spirit. 4.8/5

Wovoka: The Life and Legacy of the Prophet of the Ghost Dance Movement / Charles Rivers Editors / 2022

Wovoka: The Life and Legacy of the Prophet of the Ghost Dance Movement / Charles Rivers Editors / 2022 

I first learned about Wovoka in Our History is Our Future by Nick Estes and was moved to learn of a Paiute prophet so central to Native American history, because the Paiute are particularly marginalized and humiliated in Native American history. Sold to the Spanish as slaves by both the Utes and Dine, they weren’t particularly renowned for their military skills. Their own original story pokes fun at this hierarchy, humbly and humorously claiming their people were brown because they were made out of shit. I’m drawn to Wovoka’s story because it gives Paiutes a pretty central role in US Native history. Charles Rivers Editors did an excellent job contextualizing Wovoka’s teachings within a global indigenous context, drawing parallels in Africa and the Pacific. Essentially, in the face of genocide and a dramatic change of lifestyle, there’s a strain of indigenous thought that conservatively retreats into tradition, claiming that if indigenous folks dig their heels into their spiritual practice, the gods will vanquish their colonizers for them. In Wovoka’s case, this is the spirit dance and ceremony. The spirit dance promised a decolonized future, where the relationship between humans and nature were restored and white men were wiped off the face of the earth. The stomps in the spirit dance were sometimes literally supposed to be stomping the white man under the earth. The spirit dance inspired Natives across North America facing genocide and gave them the hope to continue resisting, rather than dying and/or assimilating. This contribution changes the course of US Native history in two dramatic ways: 1) First, it inspires the resistance of the Lakota Sioux, one of the most resistant indigenous nations of North America, who interpreted Wovoka’s teachings in a way that inspired violent resistance. The book does an excellent job here delineating between Wovoka’s teachings and differing between varying Paiute, Lakota, and federal white man interpretations of them. The Lakota Sioux popularized the spirit dance the most and led a resistance movement to be crushed but not vanquished at Wounded Knee. 2) Because the dance was associated with anticolonial indigenous movements, the US government outlawed all Native dance, ceremonial, and religious practices. The US also anglicized the name as the Ghost Dance to give it a spookier, more terrorist edge. These are two pivotal moments of North American native history where Wovoka played a critical role! On top of all that, there is some speculation that Wovoka’s teachings were somewhat inspired by Mormonism. Wovoka incorporated Christian theology into his teachings in ways that aren’t entirely clear to me, but Wovoka clearly occupies a similar mystic and revelatory lineage of the era, which includes Joseph Smith. The LDS (Mormon) teaching that Jesus visited the Americas and that Natives are a Jewish, Biblical people was apparently sometimes interpreted by some Natives to mean Jesus was Native and some went as far to identify Wovoka with a reincarnation of Jesus. I wish I could talk about this history with my former students in Cedar City, as there’s a lot of layers here. If folks have recommendations on more reads relevant to Wovoka, please let me know. 5/5 

Black Marxism: The Making of the Black Radical Tradition / Cedric Robinson / 1963

Black Marxism: The Making of the Black Radical Tradition / Cedric Robinson / 1963

I have no business criticizing this book, largely because I’m out of my depth, especially when Robinson gets REAL specific about the economics of 17th century UK. An interesting paradox about the book is that its the technical language and academic discourses, when utilized, isn’t inaccessible to a lay audience; yet the range and scope of the project of the project was so expansive, it definitely demands re-reading to fully absorb Robinson’s ideas and arguments, much as Angela Davis suggested in her blurb. Because contemporary US Black scholars sometimes fail to think beyond the US, I was impressed to find such a comprehensive history of the Black Radical Tradition that included the history of the Caribbean and Latin America. There’s a chance this book doesn’t include feminist perspectives enough, as there are likely more women who figure into this tradition in ways unacknowledged herein, Sojourner Truth for example. The conversations and relationships between the international communists and Black communities, the consistent and furious revolts against slavery, his contextualizing of Du Bois and Cesaire, and many other moments re-organized my understanding of Black history in the Americas. While reading, I had the stupefying realization that other ideas familiar to me likely originated from Robinson’s masterpiece. I want to re-read this book with people smarter than me. 4.5/5  

Our History is Our Future: Standing Rock Vs the Dakota Access Pipeline and the Long Tradition of Indigenous Resistance / Nick Estes / 2019

Our History is Our Future: Standing Rock Vs the Dakota Access Pipeline and the Long Tradition of Indigenous Resistance / Nick Estes / 2019

I slept on this book for a bit because I thought that all the news I read and conversations with friends on the ground would have made some of the information in this book redundant. That wasn’t the case at all. In fact, I’d argue that Nick Estes performs here a version of what Cedric Robinson performed in Black Marxism. I found particularly moving Estes’s discussion of the Ghost Dance movement, led by a Paiute prophet Wovoka. In my experience, Paiutes are extremely marginalized, even in Native circles, and are frequently portrayed as a largely peaceful, undefiant band of Natives, so finding such a monumental figure in the history of Indigenous resistance was exciting. I also deeply appreciated Estes’ discussion of the AIM movement and its transition away from armed militant struggle to international solidarity campaigns. I was unaware of the role indigenous nations played in the UN and their ties to Palestine. Indeed, it was horrifying to learn of Israel’s role in Standing Rock as well. Israel shared its crowd control technologies and referred to the water protectors as a Hamas insurgency in the US (maybe slightly paraphrased here). US forces particularly targeted Middle Eastern, and of course, Palestinian activists who participated. This book was infuriating and inspiring to read and I’m so grateful for it. 5/5  



Delta of Venus / Anais Nin / 1977

Delta of Venus / Anais Nin / 1977

I read this book in the dead of night after waking up and not being able to fall asleep. It felt like an appropriate choice for the occasions. In the introduction, Nin describes how Henry James had a patron who paid literati for erotica and a few authors of the period would write for this patron when low on cash. This patron, however, only wanted the mechanical action of sex, the camera up-close on every page, taking all the life and joy and tension out of sex. While I expected a book that read like a strong and spicy old school romance novel, what I actually got was much more enrichening and deep. Nin largely actively counteracts the pornographic reader’s gaze by including short stories with taboo acts, including pedophilia, incest, sexual violence, etc. Nin’s builds tension by portraying the tug and tussle between different characters as they navigate sexuality almost always without much sexual experience or education, a language for consent, or a language for queer gender and sexuality. Some parts of the book are like reading Lolita by Nabokov. Others brought me back to the sexual confusion of my youth, where romance was frequently like trying to participate in a scene where you don’t know what role you play or any of your lines. The stories gave me the language to describe violations and beauty I’ve experienced, sometimes intermixed. I didn’t expect that at all. Nin has made me realize how impoverished much of our erotic scenes in literature are. Even the racism in the book and outdated ideas about gender are fascinating for what they reveal about Nin’s society’s relationship to race and sexuality and how they interact. Only one or so stories included a racist trope that failed to add any literary merit and actively ruined the whole damn short story. I’m glad I read this. 4.5 out of 5

The Little Book of Restorative Justice / Howard Zehr / 2002

The Little Book of Restorative Justice / Howard Zehr / 2002

I read this book in preparation for a job interview (Pray for me yall). I was impressed by its ability to open a can of worms, let you get a good glimpse inside, close it, then move onto the next can of worms. This is no easy task for issues as fraught as justice and for a practice as varied, situational, and complex as restorative justice. Though published over 20 years ago, it hardly feels outdated in the United States, especially since so much of the United States has yet to adopt restorative justice in a serious way. I highly recommend it for folks looking to see if they are interested in a deeper dive. 5/5

When Love was Reels / Jose B. Gonzalez / 2017

When Love was Reels / Jose B. Gonzalez / 2017

I also feel guilty as hell for sleeping on this touching collection. It’s an utter shame this book hasn’t gotten more attention and love, because what it pulls off takes a lot of work. Literally  every single poem in the collection takes a classic film or TV Show, largely from Latin or Latino America, and uses them as a window into his childhood in El Salvador, as well as his experience migrating and his youth in New York. Early on, the movies created a space where he could witness his abuela reflect on intense experiences brought on by movies. Later on, TV is how he learns English and an activity his tio and him would essentially disassociate to together. Gonzalez also weaves throughout the collection an unrequited love story between him and a school-age crush he left behind in El Salvador. Gonzalez’s bare and straightforward style is impressive. The sort of feeling you get after having a real soulful conversation with a stranger after they open up about something tender in their childhood. Also, this book belongs in the canon of hip-hop poetics. A solid chunk of it is devoted to Gonzalez’s adventures in graffiti art. I want to teach a Latino film studies course where all we do is read this book and watch all the films in it. Someone should do that someday. 4/5

Tesoro / Yesika Salgado / 2018 

Tesoro / Yesika Salgado / 2018 
Here, Salgado gets tantalizingly close to evolving as a poet. Poems like “Nostalgia,” “Excuses,” and “In Our Family” probe Salgado’s Salvadoran heritage in a meaningful way, but the collection quickly gives way to Salgado’s most well-trod obsession: heartbreak. Here, the poems do not get more thoughtful or interrogative than her Instagram, which is fine. Reading Salgado feels to me like reading one of my single tia’s diaries, only in my family those tia’s are liable to squeeze my ass unexpectedly and sour a family party. I’m glad Salgado doesn’t do that.  Jokes aside, if I sound salty, it’s mostly because as arguably the most popular and wide-reaching Salvadoran poet with an enormous talent in performance and true gut-punching vulnerability, it would mean a lot to see Salgado move beyond her signature moves. Tesoro was supposed to do that. In the introduction, Salgado states that when she began writing Tesoro she wanted to write a bilingual collection where she gathered her family’s stories of survival. Instead, she inverted her gaze inward again, eschewing a tougher project to lick her own wounds again. For me, this is a 2 out of 5, despite some standout poems.

Art of Exile / William Archila / 2009

Art of Exile / William Archila / 2009

I’m so sad I slept on this gorgeous book for so many years. Archila narrates migration and warfare with a deceptively plainspoken style. Archila’s tenderness with his images and memories re-constitute the violence described in these poems. Rather than acts of terror reeking of gratuitous violence and voyeurism, Archila carves out a space of intimacy and privacy to breathe life into the dead and their survivors. This is not easy to do. It's hard to describe violence of this scale without rifling the reader with shock and agony. I don’t know what Archila did with his anger, but I wouldn’t say it’s a standout part of the collection. Here, Archila has performed the sacred alchemy of grieving. His bluesy style and step make the moments bearable while still feeling the sob of its sorrow. If you’re a fan of Komunyakaa and Dalton, look no further than Archila.

4.5/5 

Diaries of a Terrorist / Christopher Soto / 2022

Diaries of a Terrorist / Christopher Soto / 2023 

Diaries of a Terrorist / Christopher Soto / 2022

Fans of sad girl poems will find more to love as Soto’s pen goes beyond the queer coming-of-age narratives of their first collection, extending its vision to a critique of the prison industrial complex at large. Soto’s mix of punk, play, pain, and perversion cries while it laughs while it comes. The rare moments of laziness (the ending lines of Transgender Cyborgs Attack, for example) are easy to forgive when poems like “Concerning Our Necropolitical Landscape,” “Transactional Sex with Satan,” and “Two Lovers in Perfect Synchronicity” buttress them. The title Diaries of a Terrorist seems a bit like a misdirection, as the collection doesn’t consider revolutionary violence much at all, except for a poem “In Support of Violence,” which narrates the vengeance hundreds of Indian survivors took murdering their rapist. Of course, that’s perhaps the point: terrorists are first and foremost people with complex interior worlds and relationships, not just frenzied mass murderers. Still, the tenderness barely hidden in between Soto’s barbaric yawping betrays a much softer soul. Elsewhere, in Piscucha Magazine, Soto confessed “I hate the word revolution. I hate its bloody reality.” I don’t resent Soto for this, but I do think the title might understandably misdirect a reader looking for a poet whose political vision includes or interrogates revolutionary violence more explicitly and thoughtfully. I want to teach a queer poetry class where I teach this alongside fei hernandez, Danez Smith, and Marylyn Tan. 4/5

 

Yellowface / R. F. Kuang / 2023

Yellowface / R. F. Kuang / 2023

Yellowface took a brilliant and ambitious premise and squandered it soundly. The premise: June, a white woman and struggling writer, has Athena, an Asian acquaintance/friend and celebrated author die, in her presence and then steals her manuscript and publishes it under her own name. At its best, Yellowface could have been a thrilling and twisted psychological novel, plunging into the depths of the white mind and its traumas and neuroses. Literary examples of unlikeable or similarly unreliable and morally reprehensible characters abound from Humbert Humbert in Lolita by Nabokov to Stevens in Remains of the Day by Ishiguro. Kuang squanders her premise by 1) making this primarily a novel about writing, failing to give June any significant social or familial relationships or routine beyond the internet to provide her with any depth 2) making June pretty damn stupid. The former is just bad writing, giving an almost stream-of-consciousness style narration of the inanity in June’s head rather than taking us to scenes, where Kuang is most effective. The latter is just boring, especially considering when recent history provides a plethora of examples of ethnic studies professors, presidential candidates, and authors guilty of racial fraud who have contributed significantly to their fields and whose mental gymnastics and self-delusion is much more complicated and interesting territory. There were moments where June bemoaned her writer’s block and I wasn’t sure Kuang wasn’t channeling her own frustration in writing this novel. This book’s discussion of cancellation, suicidality, meritocracy, and racism in the publishing industry is so bungled that I think it will ultimately do more harm than good to our discourse.  

I strongly agree with the critiques in withcindy here as well and recommend this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JUdFkRdgPDU 

1.5/5

Hullabaloo in the Guava Orchard / Kiran Desai / 1998 

Hullabaloo in the Guava Orchard / Kiran Desai / 1998 

Thank you to RJ Walker for gifting me this wonderful book years ago, which I only just read in India. HITGO cleverly employs a cartoonish humor to tell a story about a lazy son turned accidental sage when his refusal to participate in the day to day grind of contemporary Indian work culture and instead sit in a tree all day and all night for months on end. There, his clapbacks at his disappointed father and society,  as well as his closeness to nature are read as sage-like. The humor crackles with moments of emotional truth that made me smile, cackle aloud, and simply vibe.  Take the surprising emotional depth of the moment the lazy son/sages sister in a fit of infatuated passion accidentally bites her beloved's ear off in her aggression. Or take the intro, where Indians of all social strata dream up ways of artificially, magically, or otherwise bringing a monsoon to conquer a months long heat wave that has them all exasperated.  Their ideas are hilarious, ridiculous, cartoonish, and while this isn't realism, it humorously pokes at the levels of desperation we are all melted to in heat. Another one of HITGO's merits is that it features a roving gang of drunken monkeys. The ending was a little bit of a deus ex machina, but I'm not even mad.  The book is a vibe and tickles so well I have no qualms calling it 5/5. 


This Non-Violent Stuff’ll Get You Killed / Charles E. Cobb Jr / 2014

This Non-Violent Stuff’ll Get You Killed / Charles E. Cobb Jr / 2014

Pratik Raghu recommended this book to me years ago, which I only just read in India. It's a story of Black resistance to white supremacy told through African American relationships to guns. Far from romanticizing violent resistance, Cobb opens by laughing off the idea of Blacks leading an armed revolution of the US as a fantasy and criticizing Fanon’s view of guns as inherent to liberation. Instead, Cobb weaves the history of Black veterans’ participation in the American Revolutionary and Civil War to its necessary role in the Black Liberation movements of the 60s and 70s. Public education teaches Black history as slavery, civil war, Jim Crow, then the civil rights movement, as if Black people didn't learn to fight and defend themselves effectively until the 50s or so. In doing so, it erases not just Black participation in early rebellions of the American Revolutionary period, but also the ideals and convictions behind those weapons, which were of course wildly different than those of the Founding Fathers.  It erases the violent repression and constant extrajudicial murder of Black people, convict leasing of the Reconstruction period and how Blacks managed to protect themselves, sometimes managing to scare off vigilantes with shots in the air, frequently choosing to bow down, however reluctantly and with whatever much subversive resistance, to overwhelming reactionary violence by white mobs who would use any reason not just to lynch, but terrorize and burn down Black communities. It erases the Deacons for Defense and Justice and other unnamed armed groups that protected nonviolent organizers in the civil rights era, shooting bullets into the air to scare off Klan members and other terrorists, as well as providing armed security for nonviolent demonstrators, sometimes against the wishes of said demonstrators, but more often, providing safe homes and teaching them how to be safe under the tyranny of the South. Cobb makes clear the nonviolent civil rights movement would've been impossible without guns. There's a lot more I can say, but mostly I want to express gratitude for this book as it made so much of history make more sense to me. It's hard to get an overarching history that shares how the civil rights movement worked on the grassroots level. One of the weirdest things about the 50s and 60s movement is that its taught as if it was top down (led by King and a few others) rather than grassroots, when the grassroots elements of the movement are the ones that accomplished the most in terms of chipping away at the South's apartheid state.  Grassroots activists had profound disagreements with King and the presence and need of guns sometimes embarrassed nonviolent, who sometimes attempted to portray the movement in the squeakiest cleanest light to continue to win the media narrative. I learned so much from this book that i really wish i would've known learned between 14 to 16. 5/5 no doubt.  

Dark Days / Roger Reeves / 2023

Dark Days: Fugitive Essays / Roger Reeves / 2023

Roger Reeves is one of my favorite poets, so I came into this collection with high hopes that were somewhat dashed. Don't get me wrong, Reeves has moments of absolute brilliance and I frequently turned over ideas. “Through the Smoke, Through The Veil, Through the Wind,” “A Little Brown Liquor,” and “Peace Be Still” I may even consider more or less flawless. I would teach some of these essays in a heartbeat. I have already recommended others to friends. But his essays frequently had me asking “where are you going with this?” as he weaved disparate, though artful, allusions from hiphop to theory to the canon to social media in a sometimes dizzying and ultimately unsatisfying way. At times, these hiccups are minor, like when Reeves overreads Future, attributing a cool interpretation of a lyric to Future's intention rather than the Reeves’ own genius. At other times, the hiccups sour entire essays, even when Reeves's insights and close readings are otherwise pretty damn sharp. Take his essay “Poetry Isn’t the Revolution, but a Way of Knowing Why It Must Come,” where he discusses enunciation and the power of the word that puts the speaker at risk of death. His argument then takes a turn straight into a wall as he uses LOOK by Solmaz Sherif as his most contemporary example. While LOOK is undeniably an excellent work of art, enunciation it is not.  Rather than exploring the ways poetry can assert itself in the political arena to take on true, necessary risks, Reeves acts like the literary salon is the battlefront. But lemme watch my unlettered mouth and just get to the rating. Can't believe I gotta give my favorite poet a 3.25 out of 5. 

West: A Translation / Paisley Rekdal / 2023

West: A Translation / Paisley Rekdal / 2023

Check out the website here: https://westtrain.org/

West is a gorgeous tour-de-force interrogating the history and legacy of the American railroad as a fraught symbol of nationality for the US empire. Reading either the poetry collection, published by Copper Canyon, or its accompanying website alone does not suffice, as they complete one another in useful ways. Ideally, these projects are read in conversation in my opinion, and I hope the NBA readers reviewed both thoroughly before longlisting the project. The project as a whole bases itself one of the two poems a Chinese migrant left on the walls of his cell on Ellis Island before dying by suicide. 

On the website, readers are greeted by a transcription of the poem in Chinese characters. If you hover over the characters, you are greeted by a literal translation of the character into English and a poem written by Rekdal inspired by the character. The poems include a range of voices from that of political leaders, such as Presidents, Brigham Young, and union leaders, to that of the workers and the passengers of the railroad, including “What Day,” a tender poem in the voice of a queer Chinese worker and “Vainly,” which borrows language from manuals of etiquette and politeness for women. On the website, its muted black and red tones give the project a sense of mysticism. Poetry as a medium contributes to this sense of mystery, because even in a poem written in straightforward language, its form and context creates a trapdoor that absconds the reader into the mysteries of history. Perhaps a simpleton or an orientalist reader would be tempted to believe the website gives them access to a concrete and uncontested history, but even if so, the sheer range of voices here would create such a cacophony in the heads of the readers, I doubt they could keep such a simplistic reading straight in their heads. The website especially thrives on the auditory and visual elements of the short video poems, where Rekdal reads the poems to a backdrop of photographs, paintings, landscapes, and film from the era and relevant regions. Rekdal is an impressive performer, taking on her subjects’ voices with a presence that animated and emphasized aspects of the poems that were less exciting for me on the page. Perhaps this is a shortcoming on my part as a reader for not knowing or caring to animate the text with my own flesh and tongue, but the strength of the visual and auditory components of the website is that whatever shortcomings I may have as a reader are kicked to the side as I’m forced to grapple with the vibration of a poem spoken aloud with all the girth and tension of its human emotion and knowledge. Nowhere is the power of this effect more clear than in the performance of “This.” On the page, the line “this is the sound of a train” merely repeats itself over and over until the text overlaps itself repeatedly. Visually, this can be interesting on the page, but not terribly so. If the reader fails to read the poem aloud, they might miss the point entirely. Your voice reading the poem--that is the sound of a train. The reader, especially if they are situated in the US, especially if they, like me, have spent substantial time in the American West, are the outcome of this great wave of history. On the website, the poem is read aloud by the descendents of the Chinese railroad workers.They are the consequence of the railroad and they too are the sound of a train. What I love most about the website is its embedded pedagogical usefulness. The video poems with their archival imagery and Rekdal’s intonation will likely help students parse difficult history, material, and poetic form. It can teach students how to angle their way into poems and how to creatively imagine history. This is an invaluable teaching tool. The website ends with a translation of the original Chinese poem left on the wall. 

Now onto the book incarnation of this project. It is split into two sections. The first half of the collection includes all of the poems on the website. The second half includes prose poems or essayistic meditations on the same Chinese characters, sometimes providing additional context for the poems but not in a boring scholarly footnote sort of way. Rather, these essays wring the material anxiously in their hands. Here, you can sense Rekdal’s eye tracing primary sources and wrestling with the muck of history, the weight of trying to depict a convoluted moment of our nation and empire’s growth. The bewitching power of the website with all its music, audio engineering, and video work cannot overwhelm the reader here in the sublime of the moment. Instead, the bare voices gather one on top of the other and the impossibility of the project becomes more apparent in the process. What voices are included and why? What personally motivates Rekdal to tell these histories? As I’m in a particularly zealous moment of my own study of history through Marxist perspectives, I wrestled with the question of who Rekdal’s project would serve. Was it ultimately still a statist project supporting some sense of the region’s nationalism and appropriating these voices in service of an American identity? 

These are difficult questions. While I’m not sure I landed on a clear answer, I want to congratulate Rekdal on her political slyness here. As poet laureate, she was given the task to write a statist poem commemorating the 150th anniversary of the transcontinental railroad with  the additional awkwardness of the implicit or perhaps even explicit--hey, you got some Chinese blood, why don’t you write something that celebrates the Chinese in particular, yeah? What she gave them was something much more beautiful and complex. Where a more cowardly or  simple poet may have given them an elegant enough poem celebrating the marginalized subject and supposing to “give voice to the voiceless,” Rekdal delivers a polyvocal contradictory project that appropriates the voices of white supremacists, governmental forms, etiquette manuals, as well as attempting to voice or describe the condition of orphans, minoritized groups, and more. Doing so lays the mores of the era and the racist scaffolding of the US empire bare; however, she does this in a way that clinches so tightly to primary historical sources that it would be hard to fault Rekdal as politically biased. The project maintains its air of objectivity through its overwhelming cacophony of voices. Simply put, Rekdal makes it impossible to view the railroad, and thereby the US empire, in a flattened simplistic way typical of these projects. While a reader (read: I) might be dissatisfied that Rekdal isn’t angry or critical enough at moments or doesn’t find a way to incorporate yet another marginalized voice forgotten in the silences of the archive, Rekdal is also dodging bullets in a state that wouldn’t hesitate to cut her poet laureate funding or ban her book. How effective is the project as a pedagogical tool? Is it reaching younger audiences and providing nuance to how they might view these moments of US history?  Perhaps those are more apt questions that are beyond the scope of a book review. The fact Rekdal is now leading the American West Center as director suggests that this project at least succeeded in providing her with a leg into this position. In this role, she might effectively apply the same critical eye or diversify what is represented by the Center and Utah at large. There’s few scholars in Utah I’d trust more in this role. 

To her credit, Rekdal lays her cards out pretty bare in the essay “Homeward Facing,” where she writes: “The work of the railroad is the work of empire, and for America to rise again and again, it must reinvest in its fantasy of itself as renewable, progressive, flexible. We are all servants of empire one way or another; I do not exclude myself in this. The extravagance of this poem I have produced reveals that I, too, am empire’s scribe. That in my attempt to critique the achievement I have also celebrated it; that it would be dishonest not to celebrate what inspires, at its root, a kind of wonder. For if I do not choose, also, to commemoration, do I further erase the workers? I refuse to abandon all fantasies of my nation.” (bold emphasis mine) I had an immediate repulsion to the portion in bold. I just think Rekdal is flatout wrong here. This is a rather extreme example, but I would point to the atomic bomb as a clear example of something that inspires great wonder, awe, and terror that there’s good reason not to celebrate. Given the latest Oppenheimer craze at the box office, it’s likely that US nationalism is dead set on seducing us with the romance of her technological advancements, regardless of their consequences, the unnamed dead they pile on. There’s a way of respecting your enemy, feeling the sublime of their achievements, without celebrating them. During the first year of her graduate studies in the environmental humanities program, my ex once talked to me about the sublime she felt looking into Kennecot’s Copper mine. This was not the sublime of celebration. The workers’ subjectivities do not hinge on celebrating the railroad. It hinges on finding ways of representing their subjectivities as faithfully as possible, as fraught of a project as that is. I agree with Rekdal that we’re all servants of the empire. Living and working in the US means having your tax dollars, your economic interests, and the labor you need to survive tied to US power structures. Unlike Rekdal, perhaps, and like June Jordan, I aspire to be a menace to my enemies and I do consider the United States, simply put, my enemy. The fantasies of the US have betrayed me and mine far too consistently and for too long for me to be otherwise.  

Lastly, I want to draw attention to the last essay-poem in the collection “Translation” because I think it is of interest to anyone who identifies as a part of a diaspora or for anyone whose family is in the process of losing a heritage language. Here, we find Rekdal being transparent and vulnerable about the potential shortcomings of her project and her relationships to the work. I don’t take issue with most of Rekdal’s methodology for the project, because mostly, I’m just in awe of the intense energy, dedication, and care she took in bringing these voices together in a website and book. Rekdal’s attention and hustle justifies and protects her work to a certain extent because it’s undeniable that Rekdal pulled off a difficult project with more grace and nuance than many could’ve mustered. I cannot imagine someone else doing much better. There are a couple of lines however that are touching in their painful ellisions: “I do not know Chinese. And since so few people in my family speak it, I know I will never learn. My family’s loss of language means my own exclusion from their past. Does this matter?” Here, we see a biracial poet and scholar grapple with the loss of their heritage language and what it means for her positionality in this larger project and relationship to her own history. Moments of tension like these abound throughout West with gorgeous poems like “Heart” and the wince in “Body.” In this particular citation, I wanted to gently unwind two points 1) The loss of a language, while driven by a complex of social factors, is still a choice. There is a world where Rekdal learns fluent Chinese, where I am a better speaker of Spanish and even learn nawat, where indigenous comrades do not surrender their native tongues and 2) To a certain extent, we are all excluded from familial past. Language is only one barrier. Unmarked graves, burned libraries, limited archives, gentrification, the death of elders in our communities are other material barriers. So much of our work as historians or storytellers is an attempt at ethical trespass. I mention these things because as diasporic people, we have a choice about how much we struggle to regain our non-American selves. The work of reaching back is inherently messy, but worthwhile. The whole Xicano movement is a case-in-point of how fruitful, ugly, useful, and difficult such a process can be. I don’t hold any judgment for Rekdal for how she’s navigated her biracial identity and I’m mostly moved and touched by her vulnerability and openness about it in her work. I’m bringing this up because I’m passionate about the necessity of reaching back, and as a whole, I’d argue West reaches back remarkably well, allowing us as readers, as Utahans, as Westerners, to see some of the histories erased in K-12 curricula, these histories that allow to better contend with who we are and who we have been and better imagine who we may become. 4.75/5 Hats off to Rekdal.