Heart First into this Ruin

The Complete American Sonnets

Wanda Coleman author Mahogany L Browne editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:David R. Godine Publisher Inc

Published:4th Aug '22

£16.99

Available to order, but very limited on stock - if we have issues obtaining a copy, we will let you know.

Heart First into this Ruin cover

Heart First into this Ruin

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    “Fantastically entertaining and deeply engaging...potent distillations of creative rage, social critique, and subversive wit.”—Washington Post

    “Terrifying and fearlessly inventive.”—New York Times

    The first complete collection of Wanda Coleman’s original and inventive sonnets. Long regarded as among her finest work, these one hundred poems give voice to loving passions, social outrage, and hard-earned wisdom.

    Wanda Coleman was a beat-up, broke Black woman who wrote with anger, humor, and ruthless intelligence: “to know, i must survive myself,” she wrote in “American Sonnet 7.” A poet of the people, she created the experimental “American Sonnet” form and published them between 1986 and 2001. The form inspired countless others, from Terrance Hayes to Billy Collins.

    Drawn from life’s particulars, Coleman’s art is timeless and universal. In “American Sonnet 61” she writes:

    reaching down into my griot bag
    of womanish wisdom and wily
    social commentary, i come up with bricks
    with which to either reconstruct
    the past or deconstruct a head....
    from the infinite alphabet of afroblues
    intertwinings, i cull apocalyptic visions
    (the details and lovers entirely real)
    and articulate my voyage beyond that
    point where self disappears

    These one hundred sonnets—borne from influences as diverse as Huey P. Newton and Herman Melville, Amiri Baraka and Robert Duncan—tell Coleman’s own tale, as well as the story of Black and white America. From “American Sonnet 2”:

    towards the cruel attentions of violent opiates
    as towards the fatal fickleness of artistic rain
    towards the locusts of social impotence itself
    i see myself thrown heart first into this ruin
    not for any crime
    but being

    This is a collection of electrifying truth that only an artist such as Wanda Coleman can deliver.

Praise for Heart First into this Ruin

“Essential....one of the most important and surprising voices in American poetry.”
Publishers Weekly (Starred Review)

“Wanda Coleman, who died at the age of 67 in 2013, may be one of America’s best sonneteers but she was never celebrated as such during her lifetime because she didn’t play nice. Coleman was dismissed as too angry, too despairing, too contradictory, too unruly and too Black. As a single mother who grew up in Watts, Coleman was too honest about the failures of this nation’s deep-rooted racism at a time when editors wanted Black poetry sandpapered down for white readers.”
Cathy Park Hong, The New York Times

“Poems of force and wisdom.”
Boston Globe

ISBN: 9781574232530

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

120 pages