Lilley, G: Raven on the Moaners' Bench
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 15 sep 2025
Raven on the Moaners' Bench writes into grace, opening an exit from a violent cycle, making possible a lighter future while refusing to forget this country's incalculable debt. The inward searching and cross-country migration that Lilley's family, and many other African Americans, have experienced several times in their own histories form the desire for a livable place where safety and opportunity coincide. Jeff walked across America, all the way to the Pacific Ocean, only to die sleeping outside in Los Angeles; this book bears witness to that desperate pilgrimage. Addressing Jeff, Lilley pens a requiem for roadkill he encountered "in a Northwest pathway of [his] own / migration, far from [their] Southern roots": "I offer up the sacrifice of one doe sprawled / in the what-was-left-of-her on the pathway / where I had to meet her and bring her away / to show you I understood something of how / you bore a terrible cost for our family, / for this unholy country, a cost for which / I won't allow any repayment / by words, not mine or anyone's, / on any unstained page."
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781961897625
ISBN-10: 1961897628
Pagini: 120
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.18 kg
Editura: FOUR WAY BOOKS
ISBN-10: 1961897628
Pagini: 120
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.18 kg
Editura: FOUR WAY BOOKS
Recenzii
"Gary Copeland Lilley's moving, no-bullshit new collection is populated by factory workers, drinkers, long-haul truckers, church moaners, a violent father, a disabled brother whose accident at nineteen took him 'into a life where the street/was all I had.' Raven on the Moaners' Bench is a testament to the struggles of Black people who, like Lilley, know that 'this is a world/that wants to rake my tongue/from its river-bottom truths,' and his poems sing to us with the searing eloquence of the real, down-home blues."
—Kim Addonizio
"Gary Copeland Lilley sings into us what it's like to be Black in America—safety impossible to gauge, dangers that spire up deadly anywhere. His alchemy is to make deepest pain a potion, a balm, an instigation spiked with reckonings and carrying the ferociousness, the white-hot passion of the unrelenting song. He embodies with wide-open say-anything-wild brilliance, the voice of his dead schizophrenic brother Jeff who claims a central fugitive power in this nomadic saga of a North Carolina death on the streets of LA. We witness the prayer-driven excavation of a family unable to contain the loss of its most needful member. Jeff is Lilley's unforgettable Lazarus—mouthpiece for the human heart at extremity. In his raw-boned hungry passage, he needs what anyone needs—safety, warmth, nourishment, a place, and people who care about you, which explains why when the book ends Jeff has moved inside you."
—Tess Gallagher
"I love this book. Gary Lilley's poems are like the best blues. They conjure up one indelible image after another, and pack a hell of an emotional punch."
—Danny Caron, musician
"To call Gary Copeland Lilley among our best blues poets is to call him among the most forthright and versatile poets working today. His poems are meditations on the breaks and bonds of love and time. His poems are duels and dances with death. Gary Copeland Lilley's poems are equal to prayer. This book is the spiritual blues of a restless poet and the restless poetry of a spiritual bluesman. Raven on the Moaners' Bench is a work of inimitable expressiveness."
—Terrance Hayes
—Kim Addonizio
"Gary Copeland Lilley sings into us what it's like to be Black in America—safety impossible to gauge, dangers that spire up deadly anywhere. His alchemy is to make deepest pain a potion, a balm, an instigation spiked with reckonings and carrying the ferociousness, the white-hot passion of the unrelenting song. He embodies with wide-open say-anything-wild brilliance, the voice of his dead schizophrenic brother Jeff who claims a central fugitive power in this nomadic saga of a North Carolina death on the streets of LA. We witness the prayer-driven excavation of a family unable to contain the loss of its most needful member. Jeff is Lilley's unforgettable Lazarus—mouthpiece for the human heart at extremity. In his raw-boned hungry passage, he needs what anyone needs—safety, warmth, nourishment, a place, and people who care about you, which explains why when the book ends Jeff has moved inside you."
—Tess Gallagher
"I love this book. Gary Lilley's poems are like the best blues. They conjure up one indelible image after another, and pack a hell of an emotional punch."
—Danny Caron, musician
"To call Gary Copeland Lilley among our best blues poets is to call him among the most forthright and versatile poets working today. His poems are meditations on the breaks and bonds of love and time. His poems are duels and dances with death. Gary Copeland Lilley's poems are equal to prayer. This book is the spiritual blues of a restless poet and the restless poetry of a spiritual bluesman. Raven on the Moaners' Bench is a work of inimitable expressiveness."
—Terrance Hayes
Notă biografică
Gary Copeland Lilley, originally from North Carolina, now lives in the Pacific Northwest. He has published nine books of poetry, and has appeared in numerous anthologies and journals. Lilley has received the Washington DC Commission on the Arts Fellowship for Poetry and is a graduate of the Warren Wilson College MFA Program for Writers. He teaches in the Western Colorado University Creative Writing MFA program. Lilley serves as the Artistic Director of the Port Townsend Writers Conference and is a Cave Canem Fellow.
Extras
February 26, 2012, the Blood Moon
for Trayvon
I'm a slow old man on the sidewalk,
crown of my ballcap pulled low
over my dome, the complaining crows
that roost on the powerline across
the street are angels in the gloam.
As sure as a hooded sweatshirt
can keep you warm in winter,
the leaned-on car horn heralds
like a newspaper the trauma we fear,
all the way back to the slave ships,
the bloodline. The crows call
to family alive and dead, a dreadful
red moon, the murder of a black boy
in the early evening just living
in his own skin, carrying a bag
of Skittles and a bottle of sweet tea.
for Trayvon
I'm a slow old man on the sidewalk,
crown of my ballcap pulled low
over my dome, the complaining crows
that roost on the powerline across
the street are angels in the gloam.
As sure as a hooded sweatshirt
can keep you warm in winter,
the leaned-on car horn heralds
like a newspaper the trauma we fear,
all the way back to the slave ships,
the bloodline. The crows call
to family alive and dead, a dreadful
red moon, the murder of a black boy
in the early evening just living
in his own skin, carrying a bag
of Skittles and a bottle of sweet tea.