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t/here it is

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A poetry collection in nine sections that each take on an aspect of memory.
 
The poems in t/here it is take multiple forms as each section reflects on variations of experience, engaging with the simultaneity of historic and present time while yearning for a future that is beyond what we can envision. In Section I, the poet grapples with ancestral legacy and connection to the natural world. Section II deals with the way one traverses the urban landscape and with various strategies of survival, and Section III recalls the observations and experiences of youth. Through nine linked poems, Section IV complicates the idea of witness under a capitalistic system bent on exploitation and devaluing the sacred human experience. Section V speaks to the lost opportunity of making profound human connections during the race to acquire more material goods. In Section VI, the poems take on the domestic and institutional places that govern our lives. A single poem forms Section VII, mapping the intersection between jazz and emotion. With Section VIII, Anderson pays homage to jazz greats and reflects on the ways that listening can carry one back to moments of growth and lamentation. The two poems that close out the book in Section IX bring the reader to a place of vulnerability, expressing the desire to be able to discern the multiple avenues of one’s journey with awareness.
 

98 pages, Paperback

Published January 20, 2023

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T.J. Anderson III

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399 reviews
March 8, 2024
I took a class from the author at Hollins University. It was about the Beats. Very, very cool class. But the point is, the professor/poet always started the class with some kind of zen grounding technique. So we could shake the noise off and really come to the table (and it was a small classroom in an intimate setting) fully involved.

So, when I started reading the book - I started reading like I always do - quick, and then I remembered all his teachings, and how you are supposed to read the words of a poem aloud, let them form on your tongue, pass through the shape of your lips. So I slowed way down and I treasured these poems. Yes, ok, one brought me to tears.

Anyhow, I love this book of poems.
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