
The Big Book of Exit Strategies
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی

February 15, 2016
May follows his brilliant debut, Hum, with poems that are at once an extended ode to his hometown, Detroit, and a resounding protest against the many violent and oppressive ills that plague America, including gun violence and racism. The poems soar when May finds their center and grounds them in lived experience, revealing his genius for reframing old concepts into new images: “Coming black/ into the deep south,/ my friend says,/ is like returning/ to an elegant home/ you were beat in/ as a child.” Similarly, when May lets his subconscious roam, each line seems to turn the next like a skeleton key opening an endless hallway of doors: “I am trying to say/ the neighborhood is as tattered/ and feathered as anything else,/ as shadow pierced by sun/ and light parted/ by shadow-dance as anything else.” Yet given the ambitious nature of the work, it’s an uneven read. Some heavy subjects, such as war, are approached with grand metaphors instead of hard-hitting, grounded images. Other poems seem too overt in their intellectual or humorous intentions to maintain an element of surprise. These are presumably the growing pains of an excellent young poet treading unfamiliar ground, and like the Detroit that May describes, these poems are full of both shadow and light.

April 1, 2016
After debuting with Hum, an American Library Association Notable Book, May deepens his mission by paralleling his exploration of the hard-edged environment with more attention to the personal: "what matters most/ is not where I bend/ but where I am growing." He's not getting wishy-washily inward, however, instead using more intimate, revelatory language to talk about danger points and the outsider's struggle. In one sardonic poem, he apologies "For being a grown man/ with a bogeyman at his back"; another, titled "FBI Questioning During the 2009 Presidential Inauguration," offers unexpected, meditative riffs to blatant questions ("Are there explosives in the house?") and defiantly explains the meaning of the name Jamaal ("What it means in the language/ you fear is beauty has always lived/ with the sound of awe at its center"). VERDICT Occasionally the thread gets lost, but this is vibrant writing from a poet to watch. [See Prepub Alert, 12/7/15.]
Copyright 2016 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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