Over at Jacket 2, Nathan Suhr-Sytsma has a lovely review of The Leaving and the other chapbooks in the New Generation African Poets Tatu release.
Press
Kirkus Reviews Profile of All the Women in My Family Sing
Kirkus Reviews has a lovely profile up of the anthology All the Women in My Family Sing, edited by Deborah Santana, in which my essay “What Is Said” appears.
New Poems at Tupelo Quarterly
I have two new poems up at Tupelo Quarterly plus the really amazing poet Stacey Waite and I about poetry here too.
Hoc Tok Magazine Interviews Hope Wabuke
Lovely to be interviewed by the good people of Hoc Tok Magazine.
Interview with Prairie Schooner
Prairie Schooner’s Katie Schmid interviews me on their blog today. Read more here.
New Review of Movement No.1: Trains at The The Poetry Journal
Many thanks to The The Poetry Journal’s Jennifer MacBain-Stephens for this lovely new review of Movement No.1: Trains. Writes The The Poetry Journal:
“Using fluid language and an almost dream-like tone, Wabuke gives us glimpses of humanity’s core like spying on a commuting passenger through the windows of a subway car: intense yet indirect, witnessing a presence briefly…Like a mystical living force the train gives birth to shadow and light. Turning corners unseen, making noise, consuming space. We read these poems as blurry–eyed infants seeking out black and white shapes, alternately lulled and startled by Wabuke’s insightful words and descriptions.”
Read more here.
Movement No.1: Trains Featured in As It Ought To Be
Many thanks to Sivan Butler-Rotholz for featuring Movement No:1 Trains in her poetry series As It Ought To Be. Writes Ms. Butler-Rotholz:
Part train ride, part memory, Movement No. 1: Trains takes the reader on a journey through which narrative blends with past, history is distorted by the present, and the tracks of the mind become one with the train lines of the New York subway system. Disjointed in a halting motion that mirrors the jerky movements of an underground train, the sway and lurch of this collection is tempered by moments of clarity and thoughtful reflection: “she / imagines the sound she hears is breathing;” “it is only when she thinks of him that her body becomes soft;” “she / would move her body in tiny circles of his rhythm.”
Read more here.
Movement No. 1: Trains Featured in New Books in Poetry
Interview with the BBC
The lovely Bola Mosuro interviewed me for the BBC about writing and life. Listen on the BBC website.