Brutal Imagination

Cornelius Eady

Book cover for Brutal Imagination
Book cover for Brutal Imagination

Brutal Imagination

Brutal Imagination

Cornelius Eady

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Description

The two sections that make up this work (each could be called a song cycle) confront the same subject: the black man in America. But this is no simplistic political screed. Early's art is too sophisticated for that, combining as it does the subtle with the charged, street idiom with elegant inversions, harsh images with witty asides. As The Kenyon Review wrote of an earlier volume: It's no easy thing for an African-American poet to find language that breaks through sociological and political configurations to sting us directly and a fresh with his experience". Eady does so with each new work.

The first cycle, which carries the book's title, deals with the vision of the black man in white imagination. Largely narrated by black kidnapper, a figment of Susan Smith's imagination invented to cover up her killing of her sons (a bridging section of poems is wittily told in the voices of such white creations as Uncle Ben and Aunt Jemima), the cycle displays all of Eady's range: his inventiveness, his deft and often subversive wit, and his skillfully targeted anger. One laughs and winces at the same time. Though these poems are spoken by a black man who is in fact invention, Eady contrives to make him as well as a black commenting on his white-invented self. The result is a stunning appraisal of race in America. The second cycle, "Running Man", presents the poems Eady drew on for his libretto for the music-drama of the same name. here, the focus in the black family and the barriers of class, and caste that tear it apart. The title character represents every dreaming black boy who ever crashed into the harsh realties of the whole as he reached manhood. As the Village voice wrote",Running Man isa hymn to all sons this country has stolen from her African-American families".

About the Author

Formerly director of the Poetry Center at SUNY/Stony Brook, Cornelius Eady is currently distinguished writer-in-residence at the City College of New York. He has been awarded the Academy of American Poets Lamont Prize, a Rockefeller Foundation Fellowship to Bellagio, Italy, and fellowships from the Lila Wallace-Reader's Digest Foundation and the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation. Brutal Imagination was nominated for the 2001 National Book Award for Poetry. The author of six previous volumes, he lives in New York City.

Critical Reviews

Praise for Cornelius Eady and Brutal Imagination

"Eady's joy in language engenders our trust in the music that his art has made of love and pain."--Publishers Weekly

"Eady fuses headlines and history with language that is a field holler, a blues shout, a hip hop rap that combusts inside the soul and keep on burning."--Bebe Moore Campbell

"A hymn to all the sons this country has stolen from her African-American families."--The Village Voice

Publishing Information

Publisher: Penguin Adult Hc/Tr
Pub date: 2001-01-15
Length: 128 pages

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