"An absolutely magnificent collection of poetry. Clark has a really deft hand with poetic forms...the emotional tenor of the poems, the sensual imagery, the voice."
—Roxane Gay, New York Times bestelling author of Bad Feminist and Hunger
Description
The striking sophomore poetry collection from the award-winning author of the “beautiful, vulnerable, honest” (Ross Gay, New York Times bestselling author) I Can’t Talk About the Trees Without the Blood.
Dive between the borders of ruined and radical love with this lyrical poetry collection that explores topics as expansive as divorce, the first Black Bachelorette, and the art world. Stanzas shift between reverence to irreverence as they take us on a journey through institutional and historical pains alongside sensuality and queer, Black joys.
From a generational voice that “earns a place among the pantheon of such emerging black poets as Eve L. Ewing, Nicole Sealey, and Airea D. Matthews” (Booklist, starred review), Scorched Earth is a transcendent anthology for our times.
Reviews
“With Scorched Earth, Tiana Clark has sculpted a collection for those who love literature and who wrestle with what it means to love themselves.”
—BookPage
"Writing on the heels of divorce, Clark channels desperation, humor, desire, and anger into themes of race, sex, and relationships .... These are wonderfully intertextual poems bristling with bright intelligence, formal variation, and outlandishly feral longing."
—Booklist
"To read Scorched Earth is to touch the electric fire of Tiana Clark’s mind—crackling with visceral, wonderfully dangerous poems exploring the feminine erotic, she writes unapologetically about Black womanhood, sexuality, desire, and its mirror world of grief, doubt, and unbelonging. This collection is a celebration of the expanse of Black femininity as its own cosmos of possibility. What a joy to see a poet write so deliciously toward longing, yearning, and ultimately, her own incendiary self."
—Safiya Sinclair, author of How to Say Babylon