boy maybe: poems

Author:   W.J. Lofton
Publisher:   Beacon Press
ISBN:  

9780807017821


Pages:   112
Publication Date:   25 March 2025
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Our Price $32.99 Quantity:  
Add to Cart

Share |

boy maybe: poems


Overview

51 achingly eloquent poems from a young Cave Canem fellow- W. J. Lofton's verses explore Black queer Southern identity, grief, love, and intimacy while enduring and witnessing unfreedom in America 51 achingly eloquent poems from a young Cave Canem fellow- W. J. Lofton's verses explore Black queer Southern identity, grief, love, and intimacy while enduring and witnessing unfreedom in America W. J. Lofton writes vivid, accessible poems that channel the energy, urgency, ambitions, joys, and sorrows of a young Black queer artist. They are about love and flirtation, sweet tea and hot sauce, God and family, life and death, police brutality and extrajudicial killings. His verses honor some of the young lives extinguished by these killings-Breonna Taylor, Kendrick Johnson, Ahmaud Arbery. He also pays tribute to some of the towering figures of Black culture who have come before him-Richard Pryor, Assata Shakur. His style is endlessly propulsive, informed by some of the Harlem Renaissance greats-Langston Hughes, Gwendolyn Brooks-but also transforming that rich tradition for the present day.

Full Product Details

Author:   W.J. Lofton
Publisher:   Beacon Press
Imprint:   Beacon Press
Weight:   0.369kg
ISBN:  

9780807017821


ISBN 10:   0807017825
Pages:   112
Publication Date:   25 March 2025
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

Preface here today, gone today after each death dreamhouse gravity reports: we report: Mama reports: to know touch better many things property for Cadarius, Keith & Miles to keep the flies away for Tae using dominium pig petting the dog when your touch went missing i remembered first time we met sweet right hooks language half brutal counting dark polka dots fire eats a mighty long time double u, double d for Kendrick the flower will make its debut when everyone is dying would you kill God too? boy falling adjust your hips ain’t dying begging fragile things water we share already flesh the leash between boys that one uncle we all know asking for miracles baby’s breath jellyfish eye lady day visits glynn county butcher shop aint neva as long as the dying die without dignity danger dodge little brown bat leaving kessler & oceans Acknowledgments Notes

Reviews

“W. J. Lofton’s boy maybe is a museum of exactitudes, with lines so precise that you never forget them. One example is the enchanting and provocative opening, ‘there was a rock in his stiletto, / small as a tear across the heart.’ This book stuns and nurtures all at once . . . or as Lofton himself might say, ‘i am nobody’s dinner/unless i want to be.’ I look forward to whatever this poet will offer.” —Jericho Brown, Pulitzer Prize–winning author of The Tradition “What to say? Sexy maybe? Daring maybe? Tender maybe? Brave maybe? Haunted maybe? Liberated maybe? All that. boy maybe touches my heart with its soft, honest lyrics and shakes me up with its brilliant singing. W. J. Lofton has written a lighthouse that will call many young queer folks to its shores. Here, in this poet’s shining language, is a country where we are possible. No maybe about it. This book is a warm, resounding YES!” —Danez Smith, Lambda Award–winning author of [insert] Boy


“W. J. Lofton’s boy maybe is a museum of exactitudes, with lines so precise that you never forget them. One example is the enchanting and provocative opening, ‘there was a rock in his stiletto, / small as a tear across the heart.’ This book stuns and nurtures all at once . . . or as Lofton himself might say, ‘i am nobody’s dinner/unless i want to be.’ I look forward to whatever this poet will offer.” —Jericho Brown, Pulitzer Prize–winning author of The Tradition “What to say? Sexy maybe? Daring maybe? Tender maybe? Brave maybe? Haunted maybe? Liberated maybe? All that. boy maybe touches my heart with its soft, honest lyrics and shakes me up with its brilliant singing. W. J. Lofton has written a lighthouse that will call many young queer folks to its shores. Here, in this poet’s shining language, is a country where we are possible. No maybe about it. This book is a warm, resounding YES!” —Danez Smith, Lambda Award–winning author of [insert] Boy “Here are poems that demand a reader, a listener willing to be completely vulnerable, tender, open . . . boy maybe refuses to compromise on the fullest, freest expressions of Black queer aliveness. I am so moved and emboldened by this work, these passions and inquiries.” —Chen Chen, author of When I Grow Up I Want to Be a List of Further Possibilities “I am constantly moved by Lofton’s beautiful, beautiful work. . . . Lofton stitches seamless and evocative images together creating lyrics for / of / from / the vulnerable / resilient body. This is a new illuminating call for liberation. I cannot speak highly enough of this voice.” —Raymond Antrobus, Ted Hughes Award–winning author of The Perseverance


“W. J. Lofton’s boy maybe is a museum of exactitudes, with lines so precise that you never forget them. One example is the enchanting and provocative opening, ‘there was a rock in his stiletto, / small as a tear across the heart.’ This book stuns and nurtures all at once . . . or as Lofton himself might say, ‘i am nobody’s dinner/unless i want to be.’ I look forward to whatever this poet will offer.” —Jericho Brown, Pulitzer Prize–winning author of The Tradition “What to say? Sexy maybe? Daring maybe? Tender maybe? Brave maybe? Haunted maybe? Liberated maybe? All that. boy maybe touches my heart with its soft, honest lyrics and shakes me up with its brilliant singing. W. J. Lofton has written a lighthouse that will call many young queer folks to its shores. Here, in this poet’s shining language, is a country where we are possible. No maybe about it. This book is a warm, resounding YES!” —Danez Smith, Lambda Award–winning author of [insert] Boy “Here are poems that demand a reader, a listener willing to be completely vulnerable, tender, open . . . boy maybe refuses to compromise on the fullest, freest expressions of Black queer aliveness. I am so moved and emboldened by this work, these passions and inquiries.” —Chen Chen, author of When I Grow Up I Want to Be a List of Further Possibilities “I am constantly moved by Lofton’s beautiful, beautiful work. . . . Lofton stitches seamless and evocative images together creating lyrics for / of / from / the vulnerable / resilient body. This is a new illuminating call for liberation. I cannot speak highly enough of this voice.” —Raymond Antrobus, Ted Hughes Award–winning author of The Perseverance “I’m astonished at boy maybe. The people inhabiting Lofton’s poems reach for bodily connection, placing importance on tenderness with others and the self. The corporeal love of these voices is so insistent that accounts of harm must be reimagined, aliveness must be recovered. And it is: with touch, movement, surprising sounds, and sharp visuals. Read this breathing book and be reminded where God is.” —K. Iver, author of Short Film Starring My Beloved’s Red Bronco


Author Information

W. J. Lofton, a Chicago-born poet and multimodal artist, is the author of A Garden for Black Boys Between the Stages of Soil and Stardust. His work explores the intersections of race, class, and gender while focusing on Black queer men's attempts at intimacy and the tensions and wonders of boyhood. Lofton has received fellowships from Cave Canem and Emory University. A recipient of Ava DuVernay's LEAP Grant, his work has appeared in TIME, wildness, Obsidian, and Scalawag. He lives in Atlanta, Georgia, where he co-curates Rebellion- A Writing Salon.

Tab Content 6

Author Website:  

Countries Available

All regions
Latest Reading Guide

April RG 26_2

 

Shopping Cart
Your cart is empty
Shopping cart
Mailing List