Picture of author.

About the Author

Roger Bonair-Agard is a native of Trinidad and Tobago, a Cave Canem fellow, and author of Tarnish and Masquerade and Gully. Cofounder and artistic director of New York City's louderARTS Project, Roger is also a consulting artist Young Chicago Authors and teaches at Cook Country Juvenile Temporary show more Detention Center. show less
Image credit: By David Shankbone - David Shankbone, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=2584038

Works by Roger Bonair-Agard

Bury My Clothes (2013) 23 copies
Tarnish and Masquerade (2007) 15 copies, 1 review
Gully (2010) 7 copies, 2 reviews
Lyrik zwei 1 copy
Bury My Clothes (2013) 1 copy

Associated Works

The BreakBeat Poets: New American Poetry in the Age of Hip-Hop (2015) — Contributor — 207 copies, 2 reviews
The Spoken Word Revolution Redux (2007) — Contributor — 86 copies, 3 reviews
The Elephant Engine High Dive Revival (2009) — Contributor — 18 copies
360: A Revolution of Black Poets (1998) — Contributor — 10 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Gender
male

Members

Reviews

4 reviews
To see Roger Bonair-Agard is to see the energized ritual of a craftsman and a trickster, singing out the fervent beat of his history. With Gully, this history is layered with metaphor thick as Calypso rhythm. We are shown a proud and hopeful youth in Trinidad, at a time when the West Indies cricket team was a dominant and inspiring force in a sport once ruled by white Englishmen. We are led through tales of Bonair-Agard's exodus to the cold and uncertain streets of New York, thick with both show more regret and becoming. Though the first half of the book is dominated by its themes, this book is not about cricket. Not really. It is about being a black boy. It is about being a black man in America. It is about what it means to be an American. It is about what it means to be a man. This universal truth heavy with triumph, loss, missteps, and moments of beauty. A truth communicated through this work with careful elegance, tangible heart, and honesty without apology. show less
I got this book because of the poems in it on cricket. It also deals with moving from Trinidad to the United States and becoming a black american. I prefer the cricket poems which give a real feel of the sport to the reader, an understanding of the longing to become a high level sportsman. The american poems deal with displacement, identity, repression. They are in a word bleak. Bonair-Agard is a passionate poet. Energy is always present. Reading out loud adds to the experience of them. I'm show more glad that I have read this. show less
Upon meeting one an aquaintance, Roger Anthony Bonair-Agard's mother said, "He didn't do what I wanted him to do. But, he did what I wanted to do." This approval is the force behind Roger's breath, that wind which inspires me every Monday evening at Bar 13, every Monday night before I go to sleep and every time I think of his poetry.

Roger is the personification of the spirit of a human aspiration that laughs at every doubting skeptic and kills every jeer and jokester that says dreams can't show more come true.

His poetry takes the struggle of bildungsroman, and makes it admirable. His wit makes the struggle of life more bareable. One can never tire of his words or his voice. His poetry is not political, but it bares what should no longer be denied.

Tarnish and Masquerade is today's poetry that must be read and heard, tasted and sniffed with a paperback book and the accompanying CD. This is poetry that will haunt you while you are not listening, until you sumbmit to the urge and open the book again.
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Awards

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Statistics

Works
6
Also by
6
Members
74
Popularity
#238,153
Rating
4.2
Reviews
4
ISBNs
6
Favorited
1

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