Hanif Abdurraqib

Editor @GENMag pitches: hanif.abdurraqib@medium.com, Go Ahead In The Rain, They Can't Kill Us Until They Kill Us, A Fortune For Your Disaster |Ohioan|He/Him

We may earn commissions for purchases made via this page

Book Recommendations:

HA

Recommended by Hanif Abdurraqib

I think endlessly about my all-time favorite track one/side ones in music history & I've been thinking lots about my all-time favorite poems that open books. This one is a favorite of mine. from the Arda Collins book It Is Daylight. "At last, terror has arrived" is a greeting https://t.co/XeusrMjUGa (from X)

It Is Daylight (Yale Series of Younger Poets) book cover

by Arda Collins, Louise Glück·You?

Arda Collins is the 2008 winner of the annual Yale Series of Younger Poets competition. Mesmerizing and electric, her poems seem to be articulated in the privacy of an enclosed space. The poems are concrete and yet metaphysically challenging, both witty and despairing. Collins’ emotional complexity and uncommon range make this debut both thrillingly imaginative and ethical in its uncompromising attention to detail. In her Foreword, contest judge Louise Glück observes, “I know no poet whose sense of fraud, the inflated emptiness that substitutes for feeling, is more acute.” Glück calls Collins’ volume “savage, desolate, brutally ironic . . . a book of astonishing originality and intensity, unprecedented, unrepeatable.”

HA

Recommended by Hanif Abdurraqib

This book is a gift, for how it repurposes my understanding of treacherous feelings, and shapes them into something worth sticking around for. (from Amazon)

The Perseverance book cover

by Raymond Antrobus·You?

Featured on NPR's Morning Edition A Best Book of the Year at The Guardian, The Sunday Times, Poetry School, New York Public Library, and Entropy Magazine Winner of the Ted Hughes Award, Rathbones Folio Prize, and Somerset Maugham Award; finalist for the Griffin Poetry Prize and Reading the West Book Award In the wake of his father’s death, the speaker in Raymond Antrobus’ The Perseverance travels to Barcelona. In Gaudi’s Cathedral, he meditates on the idea of silence and sound, wondering whether acoustics really can bring us closer to God. Receiving information through his hearing aid technology, he considers how deaf people are included in this idea. “Even though,” he says, “I have not heard / the golden decibel of angels, / I have been living in a noiseless / palace where the doorbell is pulsating / light and I am able to answer.” The Perseverance is a collection of poems examining a d/Deaf experience alongside meditations on loss, grief, education, and language, both spoken and signed. It is a book about communication and connection, about cultural inheritance, about identity in a hearing world that takes everything for granted, about the dangers we may find (both individually and as a society) if we fail to understand each other.