Ghetto Koans: A Personal Archive

Author:   James Cagney
Publisher:   Black Lawrence Press
ISBN:  

9781625571625


Pages:   114
Publication Date:   15 July 2025
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you.

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Ghetto Koans: A Personal Archive


Overview

The Japanese word ' koan' is a seemingly unanswerable riddle used by practitioners of Zen Buddhism to trigger spiritual enlightenment and understanding. Ghetto Koans: A Personal Archive is a vibrant, genre-busting collection of voices, observations and memories that trigger nostalgia of a lost time, lost neighborhood, lost city. James Cagney masterfully weaves together monologues, documentary-style narratives, and keen observations, offering a profound glimpse into the lives and stories that shape this unique community and beyond. From direct door-to-door salesmen and flirtatious phlebotomists to rotary telephones and an appreciation of clotheslines, each poem serves as a window into the heart of the Bay Area, capturing the raw beauty, struggles, and curious triumphs of its people. Cagney' s words resonate with authenticity and depth, making this collection a must-read for anyone seeking to understand the rich tapestry of urban life. Ghetto Koans is a journey through the soul of a community, told with unparalleled honesty and grace.

Full Product Details

Author:   James Cagney
Publisher:   Black Lawrence Press
Imprint:   Black Lawrence Press
Dimensions:   Width: 13.90cm , Height: 0.70cm , Length: 21.50cm
Weight:   0.163kg
ISBN:  

9781625571625


ISBN 10:   1625571623
Pages:   114
Publication Date:   15 July 2025
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you.

Table of Contents

Reviews

I hesitate to call a book beautiful in these difficult times because beauty so often means the surrender of our consciousness, our need to confront the fuckery of the moment and the life we endure. James Cagney's Ghetto Koans is perhaps the exception. It confronts the plight of human existence with unparalleled lyric intensity making for a reading experience like no other. Dare I say it? Fuck yeah I'll say it. This is a beautiful work of art! --Truong Tran, author of Book of the Other: Small in Comparison In his new collection Ghetto Koans: A Personal Archive, James Cagney shows us how an understanding of the modern koan requires a surrealist eye with a nod to a narcotic based frenzy just underneath the dissociation of everyday survival. Moments of grace and light punctuate deftly laid out hood settings. The poet chronicles a ""gone"" world that isn't really gone, still preserved by an Oakland which functions as its own museum of humanity. These are the tales of the forgotten, quiet hustlers...not con artists...but real, breathing, blue collar hustlers whose lives have been shoehorned into the influence industry against their own dreams. Cagney illuminates these lives ""into cleanliness beneath a flagellating sun."" In reinventing the koan he also reinvents the villanelle, letting the voices of Oakland, California, Texas and ultimately our future take over the poems inside, all while wrapped inside a loose formalism. In revolutionizing form and voice, Cagney, whose poetic gifts were already considerable, is showing us there is no roof on how high his voice can rise. We can only hope, for our sakes, that he continues this evolution, and that we are ready for it. --Paul Corman-Roberts, author of Bone Moon Palace and 19th Street Station, Vol. 2 Ghetto Koans: A Personal Archive is a visceral collection that resonates and vibrates the soul. James Cagney's verses are like stones thrown into still water; they ripple through the reader's soul, forcing us to confront the beauty and brutality of our shared humanity. In these poems, I see a heart that listens deeply to the unspoken, and in the debris of forgotten corners, discovers the light of endless worlds. This is not just a collection; it is a meditation on survival, an ode to the untold, and an invitation to find poetry in every crack of the city's skin. --Tshaka Campbell, Santa Clara County Poet Laureate Emeritus In James Cagney's Ghetto Koans, visceral stories draw a map that guides the reader on a treasure hunt through the iridescent underside of a skewed society. Cagney's verses guide us through the littered streets of Oakland and beyond, where race and poverty dance a dark tango and ""bullets are sperm fertilizing eggs in reverse."" Here, dialogues emerge from tongues that speak the truths of God and of Patron, a wedding takes place in a basement Church, and a child named ""The Rewarder of Thankfulness"" flips and splits on an empty stage. Alive and incanting with poetic forms received, invented, inverted, enumerated into lists, and chanted into urban spells, Ghetto Koans is a ""flower (that) cuts through the bullshit between people"", snipped by ""a ninja jingling with blades""--and true to its name, shows us the nature of reality, and leaves us feeling as though ""wherever we were going, we had arrived already"". --Maw Shein Win, author of Storage Unit for the Spirit House James Cagney's poems cut like scalpels through romanticism and self-deception as he reveals moments and characters many of us would turn away from. Yet they are bursting with the energy and culture that keep us moving. Cagney is an urban lyricist of earthquake magnitude. --Jewelle Gomez, author of Still Water


Author Information

James Cagney is an African American poet currently living in Oakland, Ca. He authored two poetry collections: Black Steel Magnolias In The Hour Of Chaos Theory and MARTIAN: The Saint of Loneliness. His books won the 2021 James Laughlin Award from Academy of American Poets and the 2019 Josephine Miles Award from PEN Oakland. His poems have appeared in Alta, Zyzzyva, Poetry Daily, Best American Poetry 2022, Black Imagination: Black Voices on Black Futures, Powerful, Black Powerful: Black Voices Reimagine Revolution, Beat Not Beat, Civil Liberties United and Colossus: Home, among others.

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