The acclaimed poet plunges into prose with dense literary and cultural criticism accented by personal reflection.
In his nonfiction debut, Reeves, the Whiting Award–winning author of the poetry collections King Me and Best Barbarian, rigorously analyzes works by Black cultural paragons, from Zora Neale Hurston and Toni Morrison to Outkast and Michael K. Williams. The author balances this commentary with his own experiences as a Black man in America, including his childhood in the Pentecostal Church and conversations with his young daughter following the killing of George Floyd. “I gropingly understood that her ability to see into people’s questions, to find the question below the question was not only a gift of discernment,” he writes, “but necessary in the struggle for Black folks’ freedom in the United States—seeing what was obscuring freedom and its articulation and getting underneath it, unshackling freedom from fear.” Each essay probes this concept of “underneath,” and each paragraph is packed both emotionally and intellectually, requiring close, conscientious reading to fully grasp the author’s examination of the abundance of irony and contradiction in Black experience. Reeves’ call to resist the salacious and decenter the self is stringent, and nothing is immune from his piercing pen—not even such heralded projects as Hamilton or The 1619 Project. Reeves acknowledges where his critiques may meet opposition, particularly in this “loquacious” age, but he insists on a more honest understanding of history, the complications and complicities on which protests are built, and the method by which tragedy and death become the property of the public imagination. The author’s lyrical prose reflects frenzy and desperation, imbuing a new literary canon with urgency and relevance that is both personal and political. For Reeves, “feeling for the future is a matter of art.” With this text, he inclines toward his ideal of the ecstatic, defiantly daring to build the sort of life—intellectual and free—so easily denied to Black Americans.
A cerebral, ruminative essay collection brimming with insight and vision.