Nonfiction / poetry
Vagabond
February 1, 2022
ISBN-10 : 1936293471
ISBN-13 : 978-1936293476
116 pages
Print Price: $18.50
5 Stars
Dee Allen is a passionate man, and these are passionate poems. The rusty gallows is real. It is an old iron bridge in Shubata, Mississippi from which people were hung and left dangling.
Via the marvels of Zoom, I have been honored to see and hear Mr. Allen read some of his poetry, and some from this book. I wish he’d record a CD to go along with it. As I read these words, I heard his voice, which added to the power of the poems.
“Doctrine,” the first poem sets the tone, and explains what we find on the next pages, with lines like, “If you’re not…/You are the enemy.” I have a new understanding and empathy of what it meant and still means to grow up black in Amerikkka. And, yes, it’s spelled that way for a reason.
This is not a book to skim through. It is a book to read slowly, to chew the words, swallow them, digest them, let them become a part of you. It is a book English teachers throughout the country should read with their classes, discuss the poems, learn a different angle of history than what they think they know. Learn some empathy for people other than whites (who aren’t as white as they think they are).
It is not necessarily an easy read, at times it is downright difficult, but it is a necessary read, and one that everyone in the country should read. After all, we all of us are a minimum of 3% to 4% black.
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