White Blood: A Lyric of VirginiaPosted in Autobiography, Books, Media Archive, Poetry, United States, Virginia on 2022-03-29 01:06Z by Steven |
White Blood: A Lyric of Virginia
Sarabande Books
2020-05-05
112 pages
5.3 x 0.6 x 8.4 inches
Paperback ISBN: 978-1946448545
Kiki Petrosino, Professor of Poetry
University of Virginia
- Winner of the 2021 UNT Rilke Prize
- Hurston/Wright Foundation Legacy Award Nominee
- Library of Virginia Literary Awards Finalist
- Winner of the 2021 Spalding Prize for the Promotion of Peace and Justice
In her fourth full-length book, White Blood: A Lyric of Virginia, Kiki Petrosino turns her gaze to Virginia, where she digs into her genealogical and intellectual roots, while contemplating the knotty legacies of slavery and discrimination in the Upper South. From a stunning double crown sonnet, to erasure poetry contained within DNA testing results, the poems in this collection are as wide-ranging in form as they are bountiful in wordplay and truth. In her poem “The Shop at Monticello,” she writes: “I’m a black body in this Commonwealth, which turned black bodies/ into money. Now, I have money to spend on little trinkets to remind me/ of this fact. I’m a money machine & my body constitutes the common wealth.” Speaking to history, loss, and injustice with wisdom, innovation, and a scientific determination to find the poetic truth, White Blood plants Petrosino’s name ever more firmly in the contemporary canon.