This ambitious collection tackles themes of place, nature, racism and racial violence, knowledge, history (individual and collective, and the relationship between the two), love, and loss. Dungy takes the sonnet form and stretches and stretches it until her form becomes theme: the constraints of canonical literary forms cannot hold those whose ancestors have also been forcibly constrained. Breaking the form while maintaining some of its structure becomes a way to reference the past and transcend it, creating new forms that both gesture to forbears and reveal their limits. She also experiments with point-of-view, taking for her speakers famous individuals from history as well as her own ancestors.
I found too many favorites here, but "Cleaning" is representative of the luminosity of these poems:
"Cleaning"
I learned regret at Mother's sink,
jarred tomatoes, river-mud brown,
a generation old, lumping
down the drain. Hating wasted space,
I had discarded what I could
not understand. I hadn't known
a woman to fight drought or frost
for the promise of winter meals,
hadn't known my great-grandmother,
or what it was to have then lose
the company of that woman
who, upon seeing her namesake,
child of her child, grown and gliding
into marriage, gifted the fruit
of her garden, a hard-won strike
against want. Opening the jar,
I knew nothing of the rotting
effect, the twisting grip of years
spent packing, of years spent moving,
further each time, from known comforts:
a grandmother's garden, her rows
always neat, the harvest: bright wealth
mother hoarded. I understood
only the danger of a date
so old. Understanding clearly
what is fatal to the body,
I only understood too late
what can be fatal to the heart.
I highly recommend this poet and her sparkling and startling poems!