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From the author of Magical Negro, Winner of the National Book
Critic's Circle Award 'Hilarious and hard-hitting . . . it ripples
with energy, insight, and searing music' Tracy K. Smith, author of
Wade in the Water Other People's Comfort Keeps Me Up at Night - the
book that launched the career of one of our most important young
American poets - is now in print for the first time in the UK,
featuring a new introduction from Danez Smith. The debut collection
from award-winning poet Morgan Parker demonstrates why she's become
one of the most beloved writers working today. Her command of
language is on full display. Parker bobs and weaves between humor
and pathos, grief and anxiety, Gwendolyn Brooks and Jay-Z, the New
York School and reality television. She collapses any foolish
distinctions between the personal and the political, the 'high' and
the 'low'. Other People's Comfort Keeps Me Up at Night not only
introduced an essential new voice to the world, it contains
everything readers have come to love about Morgan Parker's work.
'Unflinchingly irreverent, laugh out loud funny and heartbreakingly
honest' Elizabeth Acevedo, bestselling author of The Poet X
'Morgan Parker put this song on - and I hope it never turns off' Nic
Stone, bestselling author of Dear Martin
WHEN THE WORLD SAYS FIT IN, ASK WHY
Trapped in sunny, stifling, small-town suburbia, seventeen-year-old
Morgan knows why she's in therapy. She can't count the number of times
she's been the only non-white person at the sleepover, been teased for
her "weird" outfits, and been told she's not "really" black. Also,
she's spent most of her summer crying in bed. So there's that, too.
Lately, it feels like the whole world is listening to the same terrible
track on repeat - and it's telling them how to feel, who to vote for,
what to believe. Morgan wonders, when can she turn this song off and
begin living for herself?
Life may be a never-ending hamster wheel of agony, but Morgan finds her
crew of fellow outcasts, blasts music like there's no tomorrow,
discovers what being black means to her, and finally puts her mental
health first. She decides that, no matter what, she will always be
intense, ridiculous, passionate, and sometimes hilarious. After all,
darkness doesn't have to be a bad thing. Darkness is just real.
Loosely based on her own teenage life and diaries, Morgan Parker's WHO
PUT THIS SONG ON? is an outstanding debut, full of courage, generosity
and reasons to live.
Publishers Weekly's Ten Best Poetry Collections of Spring A Most
Anticipated book at Buzzfeed, NYLON and Bustle One of i-D's
emerging female authors to read in 2017 'Outstanding collection of
poems. So much soul. So much intelligence in how Parker folds in
cultural references and the experiences of black womanhood. Every
poem will get its hooks into you. And of course, the poems about
Beyonce are the greatest because Beyonce is our queen.' Roxane Gay
'I can and have read Morgan Parker's poems over and over ...She
writes history and pleasure and kitsch and abstraction, then
vanishes like a god in about 13 inches.' Eileen Myles 'Morgan
Parker has a mind like wildfire and these pages are lit. I can't
recall being this enthralled, entertained, and made alert by a book
in a very long time.' Jami Attenberg The only thing more beautiful
than Beyonce is God, and God is a black woman sipping rose and
drawing a lavender bath, texting her mom, belly-laughing in the
therapist's office, feeling unloved, being on display, daring to
survive. Morgan Parker stands at the intersections of vulnerability
and performance, of desire and disgust, of tragedy and excellence.
Unrelentingly feminist, tender, ruthless and sequinned, these poems
are an altar to the complexities of black American womanhood in an
age of non-indictments and deja vu, and a time of wars over bodies
and power. These poems celebrate and mourn. They are a chorus
chanting: You're gonna give us the love we need.
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1986 (Paperback)
Morgan Parker
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R497
Discovery Miles 4 970
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Hope (Paperback)
Morgan Parker
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R200
Discovery Miles 2 000
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Morgan Barker, the lead character of Non Friction and brilliant
author of Our Story, has all but recovered from the heartache
caused by Emma. But when his company's accounting firm sends a
beautiful young woman named Hope to inquire about some suspicious
account practices, Morgan finds himself lured back into the
beautiful story that he created and wanted to forget about. Except
this new story is different than Morgan's unpublished,
never-seen-before version. Read deeper into Olivia and Oliver's
ongoing and difficult love affair, their secret moments and the
struggle that kept them apart for so long.
Hope and Cameron made a five-year promise before college. Years
pass and they never see each other again. But then one month before
his planned wedding to Riley, Cameron looks outside and sees Hope
in the pouring rain, watching him. Now, three years later, Cam has
one day - a sick day on this last Friday of summer - to convince
the one woman whose very existence breaths life into his lungs,
that sometimes love like theirs actually does exist, and it's that
kind of love that lives forever, no matter how hard you fight to
forget about it and move on. From the author of non friction and
Textual Encounters, Sick Day follows one man's day-long attempt to
persuade the love of his life that sometimes it's okay to break
promises if it means keeping the ones that count.
After 12 years, 4 months and 1 and 1/2 weeks of marriage, his wife
packs up and leaves with their daughter. So he writes an Indie
novel. And it becomes a bestseller. Well, sort of. His fame brings
him the lifestyle of a rockstar, and he has the fan mail (i.e.
female undergarments, probably clean) to prove it. But seeing his
fame, his wife suddenly believes in marriage counseling. Their
homework: to create something beautiful for each other. So he
writes Our Story, his literary secret-weapon that will win his wife
back. But in the process he discovers that true love is more than
just ticking the right boxes on a checklist. It starts with...
well... }i{ . Note: the f-word is used 231 times in various formats
throughout this story. Read with caution.
'To read MAGICAL NEGRO it is to wonder what each poem will do next,
and to be reminded, over and over, of Parker's extraordinary lyric
gifts' Meghan O'Rourke MAGICAL NEGRO is an archive of Black
everydayness, a catalogue of contemporary folk heroes, an
ethnography of ancestral grief, and an inventory of figureheads,
idioms and customs. These poems are both elegy and jive, joke and
declaration, songs of congregation and self-conception. They
connect themes of loneliness, displacement, grief, ancestral trauma
and objectification, while exploring tropes and stereotypes of
Black Americans. Focused primarily on depictions of Black womanhood
alongside personal narratives, the collection tackles interior and
exterior politics - of both the body and society, of both the
individual and the collective experience. In MAGICAL NEGRO, Morgan
Parker creates a space of witness, of airing grievances, of
pointing out patterns. In these poems are living documents, pleas,
latent traumas, inside jokes and unspoken anxieties situated as
firmly in the past as in the present - timeless Black melancholies
and triumphs.
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