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Blood on the Fog: Pocket Poets Series No. 62

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title Blood on the Fog: Pocket Poets Series No. 62
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Tongo Eisen-Martin
SeriesCity Lights Pocket Poets Series
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:140
Dimensions(mm): Height 158,Width 120
Category/GenrePoetry
Poetry by individual poets
ISBN/Barcode 9780872868755
ClassificationsDewey:811.6
Audience
General

Publishing Details

Publisher City Lights Books
Imprint City Lights Books
Publication Date 4 November 2021
Publication Country United States

Description

This is our lead title of the season. In early 2021, Tongo was named the 8th Poet Laureate of San Francisco, which garnered major media coverage and involves high profile public events through 2023. This book will be prominently featured in all settings. Along with Amanda Gorman, Tongo is among a group of younger Black poets now receiving widespread media attention. His social justice and education advocacy for prisoners, at-risk youth, and other vulnerable populations are central to his writing. His reputation and visibility mirror fellow notable poets of color including Hanif Abdurraqib, Danez Smith, Natalie Diaz, Morgan Parker, Aja Monet, and Eve Ewing. Tongo is well known around the U.S. and beyond since his first book with City Lights, Heaven Is All Goodbyes, was shortlisted for the 2018 Griffin International Poetry Prize. (Ben Lerner was a judge for that prize and is a strong advocate of Tongo's work.) Heaven Is All Goodbyes also won a California Book Award, an American Book Award, a PEN Oakland Award, and the NCIBA Award for Poetry from Northern California Independent booksellers. Tongo's profile has grown exponentially. He received praise for Heaven Is All Goodbyes from Claudia Rankine, Joshua Bennett, and Nikki Giovanni. Endorsements for Blood on the Fog received from Terrance Hayes, Gerald Horne, Justin Philip Reed, and Kiese Laymon. Sonia Sanchez may provide one, as well. This is Tongo's second book with our press and his second in the Pocket Poets Series, placing him in the vaulted and unusual company of poets like Allen Ginsberg who have more than one volume in the series. Tongo was profiled by the PBS NewsHour and excerpts from Heaven Is All Goodbyes appeared in the New York Times Magazine and Harper's. Eisen-Martin is a riveting spoken-word poet, as well as an activist and a charismatic educator. He is in high demand as a performer and speaker, regularly touring, virtually and otherwise, across the U.S. Tongo's recent events included conversations with respected elders Cornel West, Sonia Sanchez, and Gerald Horne, as well as with his contemporary, Hanif Abdurraqib.

Author Biography

Tongo Eisen-Martin is the Poet Laureate of San Francisco, California. He is the author of Heaven Is All Goodbyes (City Lights Books, 2017), which was shortlisted for the Griffin International Poetry Prize, received the California Book Award for Poetry, an American Book Award, and a PEN Oakland Book Award. He is also the author of someone's dead already (Bootstrap Press, 2015). Blood on the Fog, his newest collection of poems, is volume 62 in the City Lights Pocket Poets Series.

Reviews

2021 Golden Poppy Award Winner for Poetry - Chosen by the California Independent Booksellers Alliance 2022 California Book Award Finalist Praise for Blood on the Fog: "Words are not the revolution itself, Eisen-Martin seems to say, and yet this book disturbed me more than any other I read this year. It reminds me that poetry can rewire our thinking-can actually change our minds-by using nothing like the rote language we're so used to hearing in speech and in prose. It can jolt us out of patterns, back into intelligence."-Elisa Gabbert, The New York Times "Author of the widely-acclaimed Heaven Is All Goodbyes, Eisen-Martin is the current San Francisco Poet Laureate, and this latest collection bursts with frenetic energy, like an encyclopedia of streets on fire. Lyrics dance and span across the page, and it's easy to imagine Eisen-Martin performing any one of these poems in a Bay Area coffeeshop, tea house, bookstore, or dive bar. The verses are also steeped in social and political conflict, and Eisen-Martin rattles off a list of influential and complex figures, from the Black Jacobins to Joseph McCarthy, the formerly enslaved African-American leader Denmark Vesey, and Shango, a Yoruba deity. Lines reverberate and accumulate over the course of long poems, and nearly every one epitomizes the author's intersectional approach, where class and race and politics collide ... Eisen-Martin's collection is militant (without being pedantic), improvisational, and thoroughly captivating."-Booklist "The title of Tongo Eisen-Martin's latest collection, Blood on the Fog, is a spring-loaded phrase that moves from concrete image to political and poetic association with all the force of a jack-in-the-box. And what more, really, could you ask of your poet laureate? ... Eisen-Martin's poetry is the kind that people describe as dreamlike and elliptical; it's advanced, nuanced and evocative of its literary forebears."-San Francisco Chronicle "The poems in Blood on the Fog confront race, inequity, and hope with vivid and transcendent language that inspires liberation. Eisen-Martin writes of fury and love and freedom, recalling his experiences traveling through the varied landscapes of America."-Alta Journal "The poems in Blood on the Fog erupt from Tongo Martin-Eisen's revolutionary zeal, but this collection is more than a simple manifesto. While anchored in socialist critique, these poems engage a wide range of political and social issues, including imperialism, racism and white supremacy, and police and the carceral state. ... Death, no doubt, is the end point, and if revolution looks forward to anything, it is to that. It's a difficult conclusion, but nothing about these poems is easy. One gets the feeling that any other approach-at least in Martin-Eisen's America-would be grossly disingenuous."-Poetry Foundation's Harriet Books "It's been four years since Tongo Eisen-Martin's feted Heaven Is All Goodbyes, and since then he's become Poet Laureate of San Francisco as well as co-founder of Black Freighter Press. Even without such formal and formidable titles, Eisen-Martin has long spoken for the many souls of that city, in sonically complex and visually unforgettable poems that resist summarization or easy description."-Chicago Review of Books "Maybe we should think of Eisen-Martin as the V. I. Lenin of American poetry. As Lenin remarked, irony and patience are the principal qualities of a revolutionary, and Eisen-Martin has both in abundance."-Rain Taxi "The explosive poetry of San Francisco Poet Laureate Tongo Eisen Martin exists in a category, nay, dimension all its own. His work is not exactly political poetry as conventionally contrived, since it doesn't bash the reader over the head with obvious polemical intent. Rather, his poems expose the terrifying truths therein by way of jarring juxtapositions and brutally shocking or even humorously coded images. ... Indeed, Eisen-Martin is a powerhouse poet whose vivid, scorching satire is humane to the core. He subverts the way that political poetry is presented and calls for a smashing of the state that is so imprisoning for so many."-PopMatters "With uncharacteristic consistency, Eisen-Martin's new poems find themselves crying out to divinities, phantoms, anyone who might alleviate his bewilderment or dread ... Still, Eisen-Martin's free-associative temperament and revolutionary politics come through most brilliantly in his sprawling, polyphonic assemblages, which grant equal weight to each line, each full-throated sentiment, each freestanding speaker. ... But for Eisen-Martin, face to face with inhumanity, what is always at stake is love, whether for specific people (anonymized, kept safe from scrutiny) or for 'this revolution thing.' In his protests against 'hurricane america,' love is the unspoken subject, the one thing worth preserving within the eye of that storm. But in a handful of brief, caressing improvisations, Eisen-Martin brings love to the fore, concentrating all of his attention, refusing to let anyone interrupt him."-Christopher Spaide, The Sewanee Review "To see San Francisco's eighth poet laureate Tongo Eisen-Martin read is to get a crash course on how poetry can be a wholly embodied art form. Dynamic and assured, Eisen-Martin inhabits the living, breathing margins of his poems sometimes as a warrior, sometimes as a ghost; sometimes an explosion, sometimes as a wisp of smoke. In his third book, Blood in the Fog, he reveals the layers of a revolutionary experience from the inside out, excavating family histories, fragments of song, Black power and Marxist theory, structural violence and the candor of the street with richly invoked language and intricate form."-KQED "Eisen-Martin writes surreal stanzas merging reality, social justice, and revolutionary bars into a swinging register ... His poetic sketches on gentrification, genocide, and local precincts defamiliarize conventional wisdom into post-postmodern testaments 'in increments of eclipse.' These poems go electric, like Hendrix erasing the Mason-Dixon line mapping a new world 'out on this lightning.'"-L.A. Taco "Continuing the lofty tradition of Langston Hughes, June Jordan, and Amiri Baraka, Tongo Eisen-Martin has emerged on center stage as today's premier revolutionary poet. A master craftsman and a sensitive artist, he reserves his sledgehammer words for the cruelty of imperialism. He should not only be read-he should be studied."-Gerald Horne, author of The Dawning of the Apocalypse and Moores Professor of History and African American Studies, University of Houston "'Revolution'" appears at least two dozen times in Tongo Eisen-Martin's amazing Blood on the Fog. Find something like a revolving, reiterating locomotion of music riding the rails of thinking and feeling in Blood on the Fog. Find a poetry of 'swinging type body language' where the swinging swings like Ellington and Ali combined, knocking you out inside and out, and turning you around in this extraordinary book."-Terrance Hayes, author of American Sonnets for My Past and Future Assassin "In this work that longs for and listens to 'real people ... not poem people,' speakers speak of their fear and weakness as matters of fact-what it's like to walk with somebody alive and not what the metaphor of a 'universal' mouthpiece might make of them. This is no precious, immortal-aspirational monologue; no autocrat stone of finality; no poor folks as thought experiments. More fugue than state. More disturbance as the groove. If poems are for anything, I feel like it must be this."-Justin Phillip Reed, author of The Malevolent Volume and Indecency "Blood on the Fog is the illest artifact of time travel I've ever experienced. Tongo Eisen-Martin takes us to a tomorrow and yesterday where we stand-contorted and mangled-but oh so beautiful, faithful and free."-Kiese Laymon, author of Heavy: An American Memoir "One of the inimitable operations here is to recalibrate the relationship with, Tongo writes, 'streets,' or 'corner' or 'city.' It's a fact, therefore, that the poems stage a wild meta-conversation regarding the presumption that Black people are external to the art being practiced, the art in question. The flat terms of our dying are plainly in need of morphogenesis. Police. Bullet. Prison. I mean: 'Baby, if God doesn't care about what you are writing, it is time to un-die.' Black poetry has got to get its head around the deranged way language and the world expect us to be and live again. Tongo has figured this out, is feeling out how to vein the poem with his own life, and that's why I love his work."-Simone White, author of Dear Angel of Death and Of Being Dispersed "San Francisco Poet Laureate is only a title unless you are willing to fight for a people's freedom. These poems be an archive of survival. These poems be a bridge. And they do the profound work of serving an eclipse of literary measure. Whether speaking rhyme in slant, calling forward Medgar Evers, or the spirituality of an oppressed people, Eisen-Martin offers stanza after stanza as a sunrise. Each poem leads us towards our liberation. This means these poems are heavy in their desire to free our current state of stoic apathy. This means Tongo Eisen-Martin's poetic legacy will live forever."-Mahogany L. Browne, author of Chlorine Sky and I Remember Death By Its Proximity to What I Love "Like Aime Cesaire and Wanda Coleman, Eisen-Martin's poems spark and burst with images that dig deeply into the soil of power and culture, politics and survival, anger and justice. Eisen-Martin's poems feel both fresh and ancient, both powerful and approachable. A perfect addition to the storied City Lights Pocket Poets series."-Josh Cook, Porter Square Books, Cambridge, MA "Tongo Eisen-Martin's Blood on the Fog whirls through our world's 'pile of imperialist failings' in a pulsing, electric rhythm that leaves no room for despair, only for action."-Emma Ramadan, co-owner of Riffraff Bookstore & Bar, Providence, RI "Every revolution needs its poets, and this is the office Eisen-Martin assumes in his latest work. Blood on the Fog services the movement by confronting the plethora of 'imperialist hybrids' produced by a 'carceral state mythology' at once fueled and funded by this nation's 'animated capitalism.' As such, the book is abolitionist in spirit, singing America in its political failings and triumphs alike. Though historically situated, these poems dare to dream toward a cageless world, one where the speakers are free to love as fiercely, and fearlessly, as they rage. An exacting, dynamic, and visionary collection to be regarded alongside other canonical, socially-conscious works."-Serena Morales, Books Are Magic, Brooklyn, NY "To read this collection is to in fact sit in the fog of a low cloud and somehow see a mirror. There are prayers at the heart of these poems that give us permission to yell at God, show him his creation, and demand a revolution. This work is a raucous devotion. It is a gesture toward an ineffable black humanity informed by the ghosts of Ancestors. Tongo Eisen-Martin is chasing the drums of our war songs and demanding rapture-demanding witness-demanding truth."-Christopher J. Greggs, Duende District Bookstore "The polyrhythmic, polyvocal poems in Blood on the Fog have an amazing formal dexterity-sometimes cascading with the momentum of Tongo Eisen-Martin's surreal improvisations, sometimes 'slowing down the poem to the speed of sweet light,' always alive with lyrical and revolutionary fire."-Michael Wendt, Woodland Pattern Book Center, Milwaukee, WI