Ratings12
Average rating4.3
Beauty abounds in Jericho Brown’s Pulitzer Prize-winning poetry collection, despite and inside of the evil that pollutes the everyday. A National Book Award finalist, The Tradition questions why and how we’ve become accustomed to terror: in the bedroom, the classroom, the workplace, and the movie theater. From mass shootings to rape to the murder of unarmed people by police, Brown interrupts complacency by locating each emergency in the garden of the body, where living things grow and wither—or survive. In the urgency born of real danger, Brown’s work is at its most innovative. His invention of the duplex—a combination of the sonnet, the ghazal, and the blues—is an all-out exhibition of formal skill, and his lyrics move through elegy and memory with a breathless cadence. Jericho Brown is a poet of eros: here he wields this power as never before, touching the very heart of our cultural crisis.
Reviews with the most likes.
Whew! Definitely getting a few copies of this for the library and am saving a few poems that I'll recommend to teachers in parallel with novels, Bullet Points in particular. His creation of the duplex form is genius and just super cool. Brown is a force I need to read more from.
“We do not know the history of this nation in ourselves, we don't know the history of ourselves on this planet, because we don't know what we believe we own.”