About this item
Highlights
- Winner of the 23rd annual Poulin Prize, Chaun Ballard's gripping debut collection weaves childhood experiences, historical events, and family stories into a living tapestry of memory that celebrates the landscape of Black America, both rural and urban.
- About the Author: Chaun Ballard is a doctoral student of poetry at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.
- 126 Pages
- Poetry, American
Description
About the Book
"Chaun Ballard's gripping debut collection weaves childhood experiences, historical events, and family stories into a living tapestry of memory that celebrates the landscape of Black America, both rural and urban. Riddled with the ghostly voices of family and friends, Second Nature is fearless in its wrestling with America's fractured past and troubled present. In these poems, W.E.B. DuBois and Fredrick Douglass have a conversation, Michael Brown meditates on the nature of the cosmos, Johnnie Taylor's guitar sings in sonnets, and the road Walt Whitman set out upon comes alive for a new generation. Through innovative re-imaginings of the sonnet, the pastoral, and the contrapuntal, Ballard engages with popular culture while examining the intricacies of all that is wedded together-form and content, mothers and fathers, grandmothers and grandfathers, husband and wife, and a nation long dependent on created binaries that serve to maintain structures of oppression. Interspersed with quotations and inspired by the rich legacy of poets who came before him-including poet Matthew Shenoda who provides an insightful Foreword to the collection-Second Nature is a testament to interconnectedness, a love letter to the deep roots that we come from, and a reminder of the myriad ways in which one's identity is shaped by community and country"--Book Synopsis
Winner of the 23rd annual Poulin Prize, Chaun Ballard's gripping debut collection weaves childhood experiences, historical events, and family stories into a living tapestry of memory that celebrates the landscape of Black America, both rural and urban. Riddled with the ghostly voices of family and friends, Second Nature is fearless in its wrestling with America's fractured past and troubled present. In these poems, W.E.B. DuBois and Fredrick Douglass have a conversation, Michael Brown meditates on the nature of the cosmos, Johnnie Taylor's guitar sings in sonnets, and the road Walt Whitman set out upon comes alive for a new generation.
Through innovative re-imaginings of the sonnet, the pastoral, and the contrapuntal, Ballard engages with popular culture while examining the intricacies of all that is wedded together-form and content, mothers and fathers, grandmothers and grandfathers, husband and wife, and a nation long dependent on created binaries that serve to maintain structures of oppression.
Interspersed with quotations and inspired by the rich legacy of poets who came before him-including poet Matthew Shenoda who provides an insightful Foreword to the collection-Second Nature is a testament to interconnectedness, a love letter to the deep roots that we come from, and a reminder of the myriad ways in which one's identity is shaped by community and country.---
Review Quotes
"Chaun
Ballard's compelling debut collection, Second Nature, weds formal
engagement and innovation with explorations of American history as it
intersects with African American lives. An interrogation of archives and what's
preserved there engenders voices of figures like Crispus Attucks. These poems
rooted in those lives--the poet's family and community--take on broader
implications when nonhuman beings like the weaver bird, the robin, and fireweed
are brought into the conversations. These poems draw on the past for our
present and future. Ultimately these poems are, as one of Ballard's poems puts
it, "stories" that should be "ringing in the ear of each generation." --Sean Hill author of Dangerous
Goods "What you hold in your hands is a collection of poems
that braids together the unencumbered memories of family lineage and African
American history. Chaun Ballard explores what it means to be shaped by others,
to make a way in the world carrying the pieces of the imperfect men and women
who brought us to this moment. Ballard's poems speak to the idea of a
continuum, articulating the life of the poet on his own terms without
forgetfulness or a simple investment in the fragmented lie of the individual.
These are poems of community and history, of the collision of time, of what it
means to live in ancestry and in the particulars of place." --Matthew Shenoda, from the FOREWORD Forthcoming blurb J. Drew Lanham
About the Author
Chaun Ballard is a doctoral student of poetry at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. He is the author of the chapbook Flight (Tupelo Press), which receivedthe 2018 Sunken Garden Poetry Prize. Ballard's
poems have appeared in The Atlantic, Narrative Magazine, Oxford Poetry, Poetry
Northwest, The Missouri Review, The
New York Times, and other
literary magazines. Ballard lives in Lincoln, NE.