Tenderness

Tenderness

by Derrick Austin
Tenderness

Tenderness

by Derrick Austin

Paperback

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Overview

In a country where violence and the threat of violence is a constant weather for queer Black people, where can the spirit rest?

With lush language, the meditative poems in the Isabella Gardner Award-winning Tenderness examine the fraught nature of intimacy in a nation poisoned by anti-Blackness and homophobia. From the bedroom to the dance floor, from the natural world to The Frick, from the Midwest to Florida to Mexico City, the poems range across interior and exterior landscapes. They look to movies, fine art, childhood memory, history, and mental health with melancholy, anger, and playfulness.

Even amidst sorrow and pain, Tenderness uplifts communal spaces as sites of resistance and healing, wonders at the restorative powers of art and erotic love, and celebrates the capaciousness of friendship.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781950774395
Publisher: BOA Editions, Ltd.
Publication date: 09/21/2021
Pages: 84
Sales rank: 931,811
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

Derrick Austin is the author of Tenderness (BOA, 2021), winner of the 2020 Isabella Gardner Poetry Award. His debut collection, Trouble the Water (BOA, 2016), selected by Mary Syzbist for the A. Poulin Jr, Poetry Prize, was a finalist for the 2017 Kate Tufts Discovery Award, the 2017 Thom Gunn Award for Gay Poetry, the 2017 Lambda Literary Award for Gay Poetry, and the 2017 Norma Faber First Book Award. He has received fellowships from the Universityof Michigan, Cave Canem, The Universityof Wisconsin’s Institute for Creative Writing, and Stanford University. His poems, essays, and reviews have appeared in numerous journals and anthologies including The Academy of American Poets Poem-A-Day, Best American Poetry 2015, Black Nerd Problems, Gulf Coast, Image: A Journal of Arts and Religion, The Nation, New England Review, Tin House, and Tupelo Quarterly. He lives in Oakland, CA.

Read an Excerpt

Is This or Is This True as Happiness

When we finally make it, we sit on cold stones.
The river curling over and under our feet even colder. His secret place.

The air has that early fall smell, things beginning to rot, the wet soil nourishing itself.
We’re trespassing.

Anything could happen to me in this white ass town. I’m terrified if he knows that and terrified if he doesn’t.

My body is puffy, unremarkable.
I’ve grown distant and sullen.
A witch told me gin placates the dead.

Whose dead have I been trying to drown drinking my own elegy?
He asks if I’m happy, and I say yes. See how easy it is

to get here
, he says. Yes,
I say. But you have to take me back.

Table of Contents

Days of 2014 11

Tenderness 12

Is This or Is This True as Happiness 13

Twitter Break: I Watch a Movie 14

Dorian Corey 15

The Witching Hour 16

Late Summer 17

Proverb 18

Flies 19

Thinking of Romanticism, Thinking of Drake 20

To Friendship 21

Letter to Brandon 22

Birth Chart 23

My Education 24

Little Epic 25

Epithalamium 26

The Devil's Book 31

Hotline Bling (Voicemail) 32

Black Docent 33

Villiers 34

Black Dandy 35

Dear & Decorations 36

Remembering God After Three Years of Depression 38

Let Them Be Not What They Were Made For 39

Cachet & Compassion 40

Letter to Cody on Walpurgisnacht 41

Sadness Isn't the Only Muse 42

Son Jarocho 43

Epithalamium 55

The Marina 56

Cumberland Island 58

Knight of Cups 59

Exegesis as Self-Elegy 61

Black Magdalene 62

January 2017 63

Blue Core 64

The Lost Woods as Elegy for Black Childhood 65

Poem for Julian 66

"And Also with You" 67

Object Label 68

Taking My Father and Brother to the Frick 69

Lilting 70

Notes 73

Acknowledgments 75

About the Author 78

Colophon 84

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