Today's poem is "My Father Is a Mansion"
from Adoption
Adam Falkner
is a writer, educator and PhD candidate in the English & Education program at Columbia University. His work has appeared in a range of literary and academic journals, and has also been featured on programming for HBO, NPR, BET, NBC, in The New York Times, and elsewhere. He is the Founder and Executive Director of the pioneering diversity consulting initiative, the Dialogue Arts Project, and Special Projects Director for Urban Word NYC, a nationally acclaimed youth literary arts organization. A former high school English teacher in New York City's public schools and writer-in-residence at the Nuyorican Poets Cafe, Adam has toured the United States as a guest artist, speaker and trainer, and was the featured performer at President Obama's Grassroots Ball at the 2009 Presidential Inauguration. He teaches at Vassar College and Columbia University's Teachers College.
Books by Adam Falkner:
Other poems on the web by Adam Falkner:
Two poems
Four poems
Two poems
"The Year the Wu-Tang Drops"
"Willie Boy"
"Macy's, 2007"
Adam Falkner's Website.
About Adoption:
"In these urgent and sometimes mysterious poems, Falkner traces questions of identity, family, love, and the self. His language is angular and surprising, his content intimate and profound."
"Adam Falkner's long-anticipated chapbook startles & shimmies & sorrows & shakes & exclaims! The subjects in Adoption are as multiply realizable as the word itselfthese poems take their narrative scalpel & magnifying glass to the family, mental health, loss, coming out, and desire all while prioritizing the beauty of the language: ‘Teach me to land. Take me into your fold. Flock. Mouth.' This book sings!"
"In Falkner's hands, the poem of testimony is also an ode, an elegy, an investigation: 'But where else to take all these questions about fathers / and sons and ghosts that have haunted holy out...' Poem after poem, line after line, he writes a ladder intoand out ofthe intricacies of desire, family, silence, inheritance. Father-grief and father-love shine everywhere. Each line the measure of effortful reckoning turned into ink and sound. Into a tenderness examined and worked for, he considers the ways we devastate one another daily but also the ways we might be opened into love. As such, these poems defy isolation, instead insist on drawing the beloveds close: 'this is the door / through which we all walk. Wave // to our families, say Thank you / or notspring into the wind."
Andrew Solomon
sam sax
Aracelis Girmay
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