Navigating the dangerous currents of family and race, Kathryn
Stripling Byer's sixth poetry collection confronts the legacy of
southern memory, where too often "it's safer to stay blind."
Beginning with "Morning Train," a response to Georgia blues
musician Precious Bryant, Byer sings her way through a search for
identity, recalling the hardscrabble lives of her family in the
sequence "Drought Days," and facing her inheritance as a white
southern woman growing up amid racial division and violence. The
poet encounters her own naive complicity in southern racism and
challenges the narrative of her homeland, the "Gone with the Wind"
mythology that still haunts the region.
Ultimately, Descent creates a fragile reconciliation between
past and present, calling over and over again to celebrate being,
as in the book's closing manifesto, "Here. Where I am."
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