Please make me pretty, I don't want to die: Poems

Please make me pretty, I don't want to die: Poems

by Tawanda Mulalu
Please make me pretty, I don't want to die: Poems

Please make me pretty, I don't want to die: Poems

by Tawanda Mulalu

Hardcover

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Overview

The debut collection of an exciting new voice in poetry

Please make me pretty, I don’t want to die explores tactility, sound, sensuality, and intimacy. Set across the four seasons of a year, these fresh and original poems by Tawanda Mulalu combine an inviting confessional voice and offbeat imagery, and offer an appealing mixture of seriousness and humor.

The speaker of these poems probes romantic and interracial intimacy, the strangeness and difficulty of his experiences as a diasporic Black African in White America, his time working as a teacher’s assistant in a third-grade classroom, and his ambivalent admiration for canonical poets who have influenced him, especially Sylvia Plath. Juxtaposing traditional forms such as sonnets and elegies with less orthodox interjections, such as prose-poem “prayers” and other meditations, the collection presents a poetic world both familiar and jarring—one in which history, the body, and poetry can collide in a single surprising turn of image: “The stars also suffer. Immense and dead, their gasses burn / distant like castanets of antebellum teeth. My open window / a synecdoche of country.”


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780691239026
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Publication date: 09/13/2022
Series: Princeton Series of Contemporary Poets , #170
Pages: 104
Product dimensions: 6.12(w) x 9.25(h) x (d)

About the Author

Tawanda Mulalu was born in Gaborone, Botswana, in 1997. He is the author of the chapbook Nearness, and his poems have appeared in many publications, including the Paris Review, Brittle Paper, and Lolwe. He lives in New York City.

Table of Contents

Summer

Argo, My Argo 3

Still Life 5

Aria 6

Miscegenation Elegy 8

Connecticut 9

Prayer 10

Elegy 11

Film Studies 12

Pokémon Blue 14

The World 15

Symphony 17

Song 20

Fall

My Sister Likes Girls and Does Not Return for My Mother's Fiftieth 23

Shower pressure. My boxes arrive today 25

Massachusetts 26

Half past seven and 27

Hamlet Tries Prozac 29

Happy Haiku 30

Renga 32

Film Studies II 33

November Elegy 34

Prayer 35

My Brother Does Not Return for My Mother's Fiftieth 36

Near It 37

Winter

All we got was autumn, all we got was winter. 41

Saturday morning my hair meets this drain 42

Nearness 43

Forgiveness Rock Record 44

Elegy 46

Second Sonnet 47

Third Sonnet 48

Film Studies III 49

Newness 51

Prayer 53

Frenzy 54

Not a Snow Day 56

Spring

Good Long Poem 59

Afterparty 61

Ear 63

Vertebrae 64

Prayer 65

Elegy 66

Poem about My Life Mattering 67

Aria 68

After History 70

American Elegy 71

Poetry in America 72

Clarity 74

Acknowledgments 79

Notes 83

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

"I am moved by the cool, wounded clarity of Tawanda Mulalu’s poems, and startled by their flashes of stark, irrefutable knowing. Please make me pretty, I don’t want to die is an elegy, an aria, a prayer for bodies—and a nation—and a planet—on some dire cusp."Tracy K. Smith, 22nd Poet Laureate of the United States

“Mulalu is very much aware of his Black body and the America around him—of the shootings, all the anxieties of being ‘there,’ and the simple yet difficult task of going outside. But at the same time he has created with such clarity this incredible archive of arias, elegies, prayers, and song. These are a delight to read and to listen to, a frenzied spring of hope.”—Clifton Gachagua, author of Madman at Kilifi

“The resonant tone of dreams is never far from Tawanda Mulalu’s deliciously and wildly imaginative lines, even though this dreamer is wide awake. Everything this poet touches shows plainly a genuine strangeness, as if it had just come into existence. He discovers a new world at every turn of the street, with wit as well as wonder. In line after line, he sings.”—Cal Bedient, author of The Breathing Place

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