"Hayes leaves resonance cleaving the air." --NPR
In these works based on his Bagley Wright lectures on the poet Etheridge
Knight, Terrance Hayes offers not quite a biography but a compilation
"as speculative, motley, and adrift as Knight himself." Personal yet
investigative, poetic yet scholarly, this multi-genre collection of
writings and drawings enacts one poet's search for another and in doing
so constellates a powerful vision of black literature and art in
America.
The future Etheridge Knight biographer will simultaneously write an
autobiography. Fathers who go missing and fathers who are distant will
become the bones of the stories.
There will be a fable about a giant who grew too tall to be kissed by
his father. My father must have kissed me when I was boy. I can't really
say. . . . By the time I was eleven or even ten years old I was as tall
as him. I was six inches taller than him by the time I was fifteen. My
biography about Knight would be about intimacy, heartache.
Terrance Hayes is the author of How to Be Drawn, which received a
2016 NAACP Image Award for Poetry; Lighthead, which won the 2010
National Book Award for poetry; and three other award-winning poetry
collections. He is the poetry editor at the New York Times Magazine and
also teaches at the University y of Pittsburgh. American Sonnets for My
Past and Future Assassin will also be forthcoming in 2018.