A brilliant new collection by Elizabeth Alexander, whose poems bristle
with the irresistible quality of a world seen fresh (Rita Dove, The
Washington Post)
Too many people have seen too much
and lived to tell, or not tell, or tell
with their silent, patterned bodies,
their glass eyes, gone legs, flower-printed flesh . . .
-from Notes From
In her fourth remarkable collection, Elizabeth Alexander voices the
outcries, dreams, and histories of an African American tradition that
goes back to the slave rebellion on the Amistad and to the artists'
canvases of nineteenth-century America. In persona poems, historical
narratives, jazz riffs, sonnets, elegies, and a sequence of ars poetica,
American Sublime is Alexander's most vivid and varied collection and
affirms her place as one of America's most lively and gifted writers.
Alexander is an unusual thing, a sensualist of history, a romanticist of
race. She weaves biography, history, experience, pop culture and dream.
Her poems make the public and private dance together. --Chicago
Tribune