Available Formats
The Body Family
By (Author) Hope Wabuke
Haymarket Books
Haymarket Books
2nd August 2022
United States
General
Non Fiction
811.6
Paperback
80
Width 152mm, Height 228mm
Hope Wabuke is a writer whose star will continue to rise. Shes published widely including in The Guardian, The Root, Los Angeles Review of Books, etc. She writers criticism for NPR. Similar to Maya Marshall, shes an educator and continues her stewardship for other writers. The contacts, community support and perhaps the buzz for her forthcoming memoir will help to lift this debut poetry collection up, and get it in mainstream audiences who are already familiar with her work.
In The Body Family, Hope Wabuke describes the troubled bond between abuser and survivor: the terror of association, the inescapable and rotting intimacy of violence, and the life-making work of running just out of reach, of pressing forward despite memory, despite various scars. This collection is made from gem-hard incidents that reveal the absurd gap between the truth, the tally, the witness, and whats called history. These narratives are Wabukes to till and to tell.
Ladan Osman, author of Exiles of Eden
In lush, cinematic poems, Hope Wabukes The Body Family chronicles leaving, arrival, and the dangers on either side. The poems are taut and precise, and together sing a kaleidoscopic song of Blackness, diaspora, and coming of age. I love this book, and I learn from this book.
Safia Elhillo, author of Home Is Not A Country
In Hope Wabukes The Body Family we are introduced to a trans-historical interrogation of how colonialism, race, gender, and religion have been shaping forces in the poets cultural and familial life. With poems that expose the brutal histories of state violence and the concomitant twisting of religious ideas, The Body Family is a lyrical exploration of what it means to be Black/Mother/Diaspora. But as with all good poetry, Wabuke carries us into moments of tenderness, beauty, and an unfettered love for community. These poems are an honest wellspring of how we face history in the present.
Matthew Shenoda, author of Tahrir Suite
The poems in Hope Wabukes collection, The Body Family, are works of lyric force that reveal a vulnerability of sensibility and feeling, and an intellectual curiosity even as they engage courageously, matters of family, of the body, of mothering, of racism, of cultural change, in intimate and powerful ways. Hope Wabuke, in other words, is an important voice and one that should be heard.
Kwame Dawes, author of City of Bones: A Testament
Hope Wabuke is a Ugandan American poet, essayist, and writer. She is the author of the forthcoming memoir Please Dont Kill My Black Son Please. Hope has published in The Guardian, The Root, Los Angeles Review of Books, and NPR among others. She is an Assistant Professor of English and Creative Writing at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, and a founding board member and former Media & Communications Director for the Kimbilio Center for African American Fiction.