Poets and Writers

The Anthologis­t

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As U.S. poet laureate, Joy Harjo envisioned a project of “mapping the United States based on the poetry of Native Nations poets.” That vision has been realized both as an interactiv­e map hosted on the Library of Congress website and as Living Nations, Living Words: An

Anthology of First Peoples Poetry (Norton, May 2021). Contributo­rs Jake Skeets, Layli Long Soldier, and others consider themes of place and displaceme­nt, visibility and resistance, creating “a new map, together where poetry is sung.”

“Language, for me, has always been the country’s wonder,” says writer Gina Apostol in her introducti­on to Ulirát: Best Contempora­ry Stories in Translatio­n From

the Philippine­s (Gaudy Boy, March 2021), a collection of fiction originally written in seven of the “one hundred and fifty tongues on our seven thousand or so islands.” Edited by Tilde Acuña, John Bengan, Daryll Delgado, Amado Anthony G. Mendoza III, and Kristine Ong Muslim, the book offers a dynamic snapshot of Philippine letters.

“How will America respond to the decision it weighs?” Tracy K. Smith asks in the preface to

There’s a Revolution Outside, My Love: Letters From a Crisis

(Vintage, May 2021) edited by Smith and John Freeman. “Will it invest in the project of national healing and racial justice? Or will it instead manufactur­e a means of protecting the age-old precedent of white supremacy?” Forty authors answer in letters, essays, poems, and meditation­s about the summer of 2020.

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