Bedford Public Library

Concentrate, poems, Courtney Faye Taylor

Label
Concentrate, poems, Courtney Faye Taylor
Language
eng
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
no index present
Literary Form
poetry
Main title
Concentrate
Responsibility statement
Courtney Faye Taylor
Sub title
poems
Summary
". . .Taylor delivers a layered elegy for Latasha Harlins, a 15-year-old Black girl killed by a Korean shopkeeper in 1992 during an uprising in response to the police beating of Rodney King. Harlins's death is symbolic for all murders of Black people, but Taylor carefully examines the event's particulars. Some of the collection's multimedia elements include photographs taken at the site of Empire liquor store, now a Numero Uno Market, and outside of Harlins's school. Taylor vividly recalls being told about Harlins with language as incendiary as it is haunting: "And when I found her name, fear had me/ rip a switch from its yard. Fear had me/ creased over a knee to be depleted." She relays the knowledge of racial injustice: "This horror was first told to me when I entered my body, so as I settle in unsettling skin, I book a room inside her absence." Taylor brilliantly illustrates the shadows that hang over Black life in America, but also the joys, such as the elders who educate and protect the younger generations, and also nurture and fiercely love them. . ."--Publisher marketing
Table Of Contents
Introduction/ Rachel Eliza Griffiths -- "So far" -- Arizona? -- A thin obsidian life is heaving on a time limit you set -- The phenomenon of withholding -- Four memorials -- Citrus visiting me with cruelty -- Paradise
Classification
authorofintroduction

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