Proud to share two reviews/essays pertaining to the recent WVU Press reprint of poet Muriel Rukeyser’s The Book of the Dead, to which I wrote the introduction.
Los Angeles Review of Books, “I Wake Up Choking,” by Maggie Messitt:
THE BOOK OF THE DEAD is a story about race. It’s about industry. It’s about being held accountable and the right to a safe workplace. But, to me — like so many Great Depression narratives — it’s about wealth and power and the ways in which that has trumped humanity and justice across time.
The Paris Review, “Muriel Rukeyser, Mother of Everyone” by Sam Huber:
We often lament our porosity to the world’s data as a uniquely contemporary curse. Rukeyser imagines it instead as a capacity we might cultivate, no easier for having been attempted before by others like her, from whom we are lucky to learn, and by many more who will not be preserved or restored. So often in her poems, Rukeyser is both student and teacher.