The debut collection of an exciting new voice in poetry
Please make me pretty, I don't want to die explores tactility, sound,
sensuality, and intimacy. Set across the four seasons of a year, these
fresh and original poems by Tawanda Mulalu combine an inviting
confessional voice and offbeat imagery, and offer an appealing mixture
of seriousness and humor.
The speaker of these poems probes romantic and interracial intimacy, the
strangeness and difficulty of his experiences as a diasporic Black
African in White America, his time working as a teacher's assistant in a
third-grade classroom, and his ambivalent admiration for canonical poets
who have influenced him, especially Sylvia Plath. Juxtaposing
traditional forms such as sonnets and elegies with less orthodox
interjections, such as prose-poem "prayers" and other meditations, the
collection presents a poetic world both familiar and jarring--one in
which history, the body, and poetry can collide in a single surprising
turn of image: "The stars also suffer. Immense and dead, their gasses
burn / distant like castanets of antebellum teeth. My open window / a
synecdoche of country."