9780870135484
Kin: Poems share button
Crystal Williams
Genre Poetry
Format Paperback
Dimensions 0.22 (w) x 6.00 (h) x 9.00 (d)
Pages 92
Publisher Michigan State University Press
Publication Date January 2006
ISBN 9780870135484
Book ISBN 10 0870135481
About Book

In her first book-length collection of poetry, Crystal Williams utilizes memory and music as she lyrically weaves her way through American culture, pointing to the ways in which alienation, loss, and sensed "otherness" are corollaries of recent phenomena. Williams writes about being adopted by an interracial couple, a jazz pianist/Ford Foundry worker and a school psychologist, and how that has affected her development as an African American woman. She tries to work out the answers to many difficult questions: in what way do African American artists define themselves? What do they owe the culture and what does it owe them? To what extent does our combined national memory inform our individual selves? These poems are steeped in the black literary tradition. They are brimming over with the oral tradition that Williams perfected while spending years on the poetry "slam" circuit. This, combined with her musical upbringing, give the collection not only a sense of urgency, but also a rhythm, a breath all its own. Kin tackles not only racial issues, but also the troubling realities of violent acts that can occur, especially in our inner cities. But more importantly, the landscape that Williams creates offers readers an alternative to the racial/political dichotomy in which we all live. Overall, the book resonates with a message of reconciliation that will leave the reader uplifted.

 

Reviews

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

Oral traditions, '60s and '70s protest poetry, present-day "slam" poetics and the considered compactness of page-oriented lyric are all fair game in Williams's debut. A Cornell MFA, Williams has also been a Nuyorican regular, and the exhortations, elegies and homages of the book reflect a careful awareness of code switching--"Ivy and candied yams don't mix." Following the title, much of the work in the first half of the volume focuses on the speaker's adoptive interracial family; others address her network of friends, writers and artists of previous generations or "The First Time I Saw Flo-Jo." An especially striking evocation takes readers to "Greg's Beautification Shop" in Washington. D.C.: there, "The hours between Noon and dusk are the difference/ between good gossip and `child, that's old news.' " A mordant poem to "Mr Sausage Lips" admonishes him, "don't be sneakin seconds/ when u ain't done wit the first/ don't be offering biscuits/ to folk who ain't hungry " Williams's triumphs can evoke June Jordan's poems of adolescence, or Kevin Young's more recent depictions of black family life. Her lesser work is hard to distinguish from that of other poets who mine the same themes, or who embrace a rhetoric of flat assertion. ("Ode of the Hoodoo Woman" lets readers know that "it was my high school boyfriend/ who may have never learned being a man means/ not dumping your girlfriend on the Prom eve.") Yet the fact that "I've eaten rabbit in Rome, paella in Barcelona, couscous in Morocco, and am seated at the worst tables by mentally challenged Maitre'd's who think my big ass is there for coffee" calls for straight talk, and Williams steps up unflinchingly. (June) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.|

Library Journal

A public poet of the oral tradition, Williams is a fixture at New York's Nuyorican Poets Caf and on the reading and slam circuit. The poems in this debut collection are conscious of voice, performance rhythm, gesture, and posture. Equally important, though, are the value and nuances of the word: "In some old men there is a softness/ in voice a hint of dusty Alabama/ summers of boyhood & swagger/ of their walk whispers of past/ glories." There is swagger, hip humor, and sassiness to Williams's poems. We encounter her family, including her father ("You were jazz and leather on a rainy day,/ soft and pliable") and mother ("When I die/ I will wear/ the face of my mother,/ gladly"). The concept of family is extended, though, and its effects are visible in many quarters of society. Her view of the world is clear and real, and the souls her poems conjure forth get to preen, strut, and dance, as Williams evokes the streets and the off-white corridors of the republic. Recommended for public and academic libraries, especially those with poetry, women's literature, and African American collections.--Louis McKee, Painted Bride Arts Ctr., Philadelphia Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.\