I'm a bit late to the party on Refuse (by which I mean I should have bought a copy when he came to read at my college a couple years ago) but boy am I glad I finally got around to reading it. Randall's work straddles the line between experiment and revelation gorgeously, playing effectively and freely with form while alway being grounded in a poetic transformation of experience, feeling, sound, and movement. (I will say that there's a part of me that wants to know what joyful, ecstatic, poems look like as they are few and far between in this collection, but it draws you in well with its difficult material anyway.) The poems are smart but never precious, raw but never unfinished, just brimming with lyrical force. Knowing he studied with Amiee Nezhukumatathil and Nathalie Anderson, I think I can see their hands, but his voice is uniquely his own, singing and strong.
My favorite poems included all the poems entitled "Palinopsia," "Pregame Prayer with Complete Citations," "Icarus," "A Thousand Cardinals," "This Land is Where We Buried Everything that Came Before You: African American Hitory and Concepts of Ownership in Early Elementary Education," "The Spool Who Sat by the Once Bombed City: Psychological Explorations of Ancestral Memory," and "Portrait of My Father as Sysiphus." As might be clear just from the titles, these are intimate without seeming to place his pain on display--we are not permitted to be voyeurs, instead we are let in or not entirely on his terms. A brilliant book. Highly recommended.