News

With April showers, poetry flowers: Three vibrant collections

For poetry lovers, the art form appears as vibrant and unexpected as a swath of wildflowers running along a highway. Favorite poems take root and bloom in memory, resurfacing when needed, just as spring does every year.

April – which is National Poetry Month – is a time to celebrate this genre. Three new books offer fascinating glimpses into 21st-century America. 

Why We Wrote This

Poetry anchors us to the past and offers glimpses into the future. We celebrate National Poetry Month with three vibrant new books that challenge perceptions and broaden the landscape of poetry.

In “Above Ground,” Atlantic staff writer and poet Clint Smith recounts how fatherhood has changed his life, from the time he first saw a sonogram of his son and his son’s delivery, to the birth of his daughter and how he and his wife have juggled the challenges of parenting. 

Award-winning performance poet Mahogany L. Browne’s “Chrome Valley” uses direct, fearless language to present a prismatic picture of the Black female experience in America. “We praise their names / & the hands that write / Praise the mouth that speaks,” Browne writes of previous generations.

In “Musical Tables,” former U.S. poet laureate Billy Collins presents 125 short poems – some of which feel like haiku, brief snapshots, or postcards – with just enough text to convey a mystery, question, or discovery. 

The brevity of the poems brings to mind early encounters with poetry, when the genre seemed almost magical. 

To readers who love poetry, the art form appears as vibrant and unexpected as a swath of wildflowers running along a highway. Favorite books and poems take root and bloom in memory, resurfacing when needed, just as spring does every year. New collections offer the opportunity to explore a variety of insights, ideas, and discoveries.

April – which is National Poetry Month – is a time to celebrate this genre, which existed before written language and serves to anchor us to the past and who we have been. Poetry also reflects who we are now and what we might become.

Three new books by contemporary poets offer fascinating glimpses of 21st-century America, the challenges we face, and how poetry can help us re-imagine ourselves. 

Why We Wrote This

Poetry anchors us to the past and offers glimpses into the future. We celebrate National Poetry Month with three vibrant new books that challenge perceptions and broaden the landscape of poetry.

Fatherhood’s complicated emotions

One of the most anticipated poetry collections this spring is “Above Ground,” by Clint Smith. While many readers may know Smith for his prose – he is a staff writer at The Atlantic and the author of the bestselling narrative nonfiction book “How the Word Is Passed: A Reckoning with the History of Slavery Across America” – he is also an award-winning poet. His first collection, “Counting Descent,” won the 2017 Literary Award for Best Poetry Book from the Black Caucus of the American Library Association and was a finalist for an NAACP Image Award. 

In “Above Ground,” Smith recounts how fatherhood has changed his life, from the time he first saw a sonogram of his son and later his son’s early delivery, to the birth of his daughter, and how he and his wife have juggled the challenges of parenting. 

Previous ArticleNext Article