Reviews

Don't Call Us Dead by Danez Smith

leasummer's review against another edition

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4.0

Please seek out diverse reviews.
This is a powerful collection about the Black male body, in violence, in America, in love. It offers beautiful imagery and really paints a picture with each poem and collectively as a whole.

joey_schafer's review against another edition

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challenging dark emotional medium-paced

4.25

mako_todo's review against another edition

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dark emotional hopeful reflective tense

4.0

kaelanaomi's review against another edition

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challenging emotional medium-paced

5.0

ktxx22's review against another edition

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4.0

When poetry brings you to tears, and you need to reread/relisten to something inside a couple of times in a row And you cry reach time. You know it’s powerful to say the least! The poems in this about his positive HIV status and his vitriol for white America really made me feel some heavy emotions. I really enjoyed this book!!

asburris325's review against another edition

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challenging emotional reflective

5.0

kurtwombat's review against another edition

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5.0

Like most people, I don’t read nearly enough poetry. Despite marvelous luck with my last two poetry reads: Billy Collins collection: SAILING ALONE AROUND THE ROOM (alternately funny and touching) & Edward Hirsch: GABRIEL (utterly devastating—the very soul screams with pain), still I hesitate. I think I’m slow to read new poetry because it is such a high wire act. Prose has the luxury of enough words to fill landscapes while poetry is just that small puddle after a brief rain. Poetry has so little margin for error that I lose hope quickly if it doesn’t grab me right away. Thankfully Danez Smith’s DON’T CALL US DEAD starts in a way that moves and informs and opens communication for the poems that follow. The poems are a skin you’ll use to feel how young gay men of color live and die and move back and forth between the two. Many of these poems shout across this divide with anger and despair like nails across that skin. The beauty of this book is the tangible sense of the life somehow going on after the young man has been lost to drugs or violence or at the hands of the law. There is a kind of gossamer existence that continues shining back what might have been had the lives not ended early. There are a few parts that didn’t work for me but the rest was so good I just considered them a moment to rest.

baralillaannie's review against another edition

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5.0

Amazing, important, stunning. Speechless at a lot of the poems in this book. A must read. Being a black gay man in America, such moving and loud poetry.

stressgirl70's review against another edition

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challenging emotional reflective medium-paced

5.0

hunnybunny33's review against another edition

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5.0

i dont usually enjoy poetry but this was spectacular. i would give it ten stars if i could