“Bennett is showing out in the positive Black vernacular sense: demonstrating his erudition for shared delight with the reader . . . Bennett’s poetry combines structural elegance with taut rhythms harking back to his undergraduate days in the New York slam poetry scene . . . In layered metaphor, the text calls to mind the shifting hues of water, the colors of Civil War uniforms and the nation itself, with all its wrath and love and reaching. God bless America, indeed.” —The New York Times
“An ode to the America that was, is, and will be.” —The Boston Globe
“A dazzling, expansive exploration of personal experience and the touchstones that informed it in poems that examine national identity, parenthood, masculinity, popular culture, and the natural world. . . .Bennett’s clever wordplay, wit, and gift for setting the scene permeate the collection and immerse the reader in the journey with vivid clarity. . . .An essential addition to the American poetic canon.” —Booklist, starred review
“As much as it’s a triple-album-sized poetic performance of the word, Bennett’s book is also a history and theory of the American ‘we,’ across its myriad inflections—familial, romantic, local, congregational, coalitional, racial, transhistorical, even universal.” —Christopher Spaide, LitHub
Praise for Joshua Bennett
“Don’t miss this superb laying bare of Black joy and genius!” —Cornel West
“At a moment in American culture punctuated to a heartbreaking degree by acts of hatred, violence and disregard, I can think of nothing we need to ponder and to sing of more than our shared grief and our capacity not just for empathy but genuine love. Poetry is critical to such an endeavor—and Joshua Bennett’s astounding, dolorous, rejoicing voice is indispensable.” —Tracy K. Smith
“Here, a single moment shimmers with a million resonances of attention. So the world is loved this much. And what has been taken has been taken this much. Bennett insists on repair even as he mourns what is utterly irreparable. This book is part of a breathful, bodied fight for Black life. I am emboldened and sharpened by Bennett's genius and by his love made plain across each of these shimmering pages.” —Aracelis Girmay, author of The Black Maria
“With a singularly expansive and compassionate view of history, Bennett sweeps across generations of joy, suffering, and connection.” —Lit Hub
“A tender celebration of vulnerability and the strength that blooms quietly in its presence.” —The Atlantic