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The poems of Might Kindred wonder aloud: can we belong to one another, and can a people belong to a dreaming machine? Conjuring mountains and bodies of water, queer and immigrant poetics, beloveds both human and animal, Monica Gomery explores the intimately personal and the possibility of a collective voice. Here anthems are sung and fall apart midsong. The speaker exchanges letters with her ancestors, is visited by a shadow sister, and interrogates what it means to make a home as a first-generation American.
Winner of the Raz/Shumaker Prairie Schooner Book Prize in Poetry, the poems in Might Kindred are rooted in the body and its cousins, seeking the possibility of kinship, in case we might kindness, might ardor together. Belonging and unbelonging are claimed as part of the same complicated whole, and Gomery’s intersections reach for something divine at the center.
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The poems of Might Kindred wonder aloud: can we belong to one another, and can a people belong to a dreaming machine? Conjuring mountains and bodies of water, queer and immigrant poetics, beloveds both human and animal, Monica Gomery explores the intimately personal and the possibility of a collective voice. Here anthems are sung and fall apart midsong. The speaker exchanges letters with her ancestors, is visited by a shadow sister, and interrogates what it means to make a home as a first-generation American.
Winner of the Raz/Shumaker Prairie Schooner Book Prize in Poetry, the poems in Might Kindred are rooted in the body and its cousins, seeking the possibility of kinship, in case we might kindness, might ardor together. Belonging and unbelonging are claimed as part of the same complicated whole, and Gomery’s intersections reach for something divine at the center.