Cottonlandia: Poems

by Rebecca Black

On This Page

Description

The poems in Rebecca Black's first volume, Cottonlandia, move through myth and landscape, beginning in the deep South's "shimmer and tar" and ending in the "soot and orange dolor" of the California desert. Cottonlandia conjures a proto-continent where fashionable golems pose for antique photographs and nineteenth-century naturalists wander into the melee of the civil rights struggle in the South. By turns haunting and comic, Black's poems describe the archaeology of the apocalypse. show more Countesses leave behind poisonous snapshots, lovers examine their shapes in the mirror, and Seminoles return for skeletons arranged illegally in exhibits, even as floods force antebellum coffins to rise. In the title poem, reproduced on this page, the lines of a spiritual splinter and circle through a loose narrative, evoking the delirium of class and race in the author's Georgia hometown. Throughout the volume, poems quarrel with primal forces, threading the needle of historical oblivion with a dark, intelligent, and incantatory voice. show less

Tags

Member Reviews

1 review
The first two segments are boring, but it really picks up towards the end. Entertaining.

Members

Recently Added By

Author Information

1+ Work 5 Members
Rebecca Black teaches literature and writing at Santa Clara University.

Awards and Honors

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Cottonlandia: Poems

Classifications

Genres
Poetry, Fiction and Literature
DDC/MDS
811.6Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican poetry2000-
LCC
PS3602 .L32524 .C68Language and LiteratureAmerican literature
BISAC

Statistics

Members
5
Popularity
3,425,868
Reviews
1
Rating
½ (3.50)
Languages
English
Media
Paper
ISBNs
1