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parsed(2024-03-01) - pubdate: 03/24
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pub date: 1709272800
today: 1739426400, pubdate > today = false

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Watchnight

March 1, 2024 | Trade paperback
ISBN: 9781643621944
$27.50
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Description

In WATCHNIGHT, we accompany Johnson's unnamed protagonist on a psychedelic quest across myriad forms, places, and times marked by climate crisis, exodus, and Black trans identity-making. 


In exhilarating lyric poems and chiseled prose blocks, Cyrée Jarelle Johnson charts the history of his family alongside the history of Watchnight--a churchy holiday of messianic tarrying--and steps through portals to render the human faces of American internal migration and mass displacement--from countryside to city and back again. Spanning from 1803 to a near-future rife with class tension and racial anxiety, WATCHNIGHT is a study of Black bonds, Black grief, and Black flight.

About this Author

Cyrée Jarelle Johnson is a poet from Piscataway, NJ. He is the author of SLINGSHOT (Nightboat Books, 2019), winner of a Lambda Literary Award for Gay Poetry. Johnson was awarded a Ruth Lilly and Dorothy Sargent Rosenberg Poetry Fellowship from the Poetry Foundation and served as the inaugural Poet-In-Residence at the Brooklyn Public Library. His poems have appeared in Poetry, Apogee, Foglifter, WUSSY, and Atmos among other publications. WATCHNIGHT, his forthcoming book of poetry, considers ancestry as history in the context of the Great Black Migration of the 20th century, familial estrangement, and queer family. Find him online at cyreejarellejohnson.com or @cyreejarelle Author residence: Kingston, New York.

ISBN: 9781643621944
Format: Trade paperback
Pages: 104
Publisher: Nightboat Books
Published: 2024-03-01

Reviews

"Some a few pages long, and some untitled, the poems present themselves as homemade weapons (like slingshots) against malign parents, authority figures, structural racism and fears of the other. It's challenging work, in its language, its stories, its subcultural references ('prince died for fem bois'), yet it offers pellucid queer intimacies." -Stephanie Burt, The New York Times 


"Nothing short of magnificent, Johnson jailbreaks language to speak ambitious, rigorous lyrics of Black/trans/disabled/ sex working story. At times I screamed out loud at the wondrousness of the work. SLINGSHOT is the next generation of Black disabled genius poetics, and I'm in awe and grateful." -Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha

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