Because I can never say anything plainly. Because I always stutter politely. Because there's always the chatter
before the kiss. --from "In Need of Subtitles"
In this award-winning debut, Sjohnna McCray movingly recounts a life born out of wartime to a Korean mother and an American father serving during the Vietnam War. Their troubled histories, and McCray's own, are told with lyric passion and the mythic undercurrents of discovering one's own identity, one's own desires. What emerges is a self- and family portrait of grief and celebration, one that insists on our lives as anything, please, but singular. Rapture is an extraordinary first collection, with poems of rare grace and feeling.
Sjohnna McCray's debut shatters a thousand silences, from the unlikely marriage of his war-wounded father and sex-worker mother to his own coming out. The poems are refreshingly candid ("This is something my mother knew: to fuck/ a man without a metaphor") and eclectic (there are poems inspired by Superman, arthouse cinema, ballet, myth...even by television's most famous painting instructor, Bob Ross). As with many first collections, there is much to love and much to return to, and I truly look forward to more from this formidable and fascinating new voice.
This collection is very meaningful to me. So many books of poetry sit too heavily on one topic, so that they offer only a small view of humanity. In this book we got a much more rounded view--poet as son, poet as lover, poet as vulnerable historian. Reading this book made me feel free to be a person in the world.
Some of my favorite lines:
You match the constellations Each to a different longing.
McCray’s themes in this first poetry collection are desire, identity and memory. He excavates his past and dredges up images and motifs that form a personal mythology. Many of the poems seem autobiographical.
There is a particular focus on the imperfections of the human body: the stump of a father’s amputated leg; “flabby buttocks� and “the bike-tire cap of her nipples� in ‘Peeping Toms�; a Korean comfort woman “reducing men to texture:/the prickly hairs, the moles and bumps,/the scarred trenches along the shoulders.�
In line with this focus on the physical, the collection charts a growth from boyhood to maturity. We see snapshots of the narrator’s relationships first with his parents and then his lovers. There is nothing idealized here, and a hint of adolescent pain and confusion underpins the tone. ‘Night Sweats� begins, “You sleep as I imagine/a superhero flies:one arm straight/and one leg cocked� and ends, “Your name/should have been Clark.� The lover isn’t Superman, but Superman’s fragile alter-ego.
McCray won the Walt Whitman Award of the Academy of American Poets for this collection and it’s easy to see why. He doesn’t eschew complexity but his syntax is strikingly clear and there are images which lodge in the reader’s mind and won’t depart. There is also a ringing musicality to these poems � they resonate in the ear. Overall, I thought this a great debut and a welcome addition to the stellar group of African American poets making their way in the world.
Rapture: Poems is a set of poems that contains such beautiful phrases. The way McCray features people in his poetry is a unique style of writing. Many of the poems are centralized around nature and they are remarkably descriptive. McCray does not shy away from writing the world around us with a new perspective that leaves the reader wanting more. An example of his prowess is seen well in “Winter Anesthesia.�
“It’s something like the ache of a missing leg The twitch of an invisible limb.
Like winter in the hills When the sleet and snow are so heavy
Outside there’s only white on white. Something happens, no ears.�
This is a wonderful book of poetry. The poems are gorgeous with imagery and stories, so close and so personal. The language choices are beautiful as well, in terms of both meaning and sound.
5/5 i feel like haunting is a pretty cliched way to describe poetry, but holy shit, these poems are haunting. i loved so many poems in here. “only� chose to quote three, but some other favorites include “How to Move,� “Winter Anesthesia,� “Comfort Woman,� “Neckbone,� “Yellow Apples,� “On the Cutting Room Floor,� “Glorious Hole,� “Next to Him,� “The Widower,� “Next to Him,� “The Green Bowls,� & “The Messenger.�
some quotes:
"His face is as faraway as the light of a farmhouse across dark fields. The man across from me on the bus smells. Seven hours or more, the ride's been all bad weather, moonless and sober. His dark skin, titian, hardens to umbra about the knuckles and the eyes. He leans toward the window. I think grief must be circular, the way a man can hit his head on the silver handle, awaken, turn, and nod off again. —His Face Is as Far Away as the Light
"When I wake, this is what I tell myself: I belong to this, to all the ghosts present
in the DNA. Diabates, an ancient Greek consort, sweeps through the halls
of my body. It seems the proper gift from my father, memory locked down in the cells
of my bladder. Frequent urination is a hard nag to beat. My body
is my father's complaint. He rings at two in the morning. A piss in the pot, a shot
in the dark. He's never too far away. —Type 2
(gonna ruin the structure of this poem but it's still beautiful)
"I tuck the sheet under both arms, tidying after lust. I hear an arch of urine fizzling in the bowl. Is this what father meant when he stood and explained, Be careful?Before leaving, he made toast and eggs over easy. A meal to coat the stomach. Did he know about the men taking laps around the bar until finding a spot to eye a boy, pare him down, undo his clothes, molecule by molecule, as if wearing X-ray specs, found only in the backs of comic books? He must've known about the grope and the rub down, the mashed mouths, the need to join, the legs pinned like insect wings to a headboard. He must have known the odds of failure, the odds of being twenty-one. How darkness is more of a presence than desire, how the absence of a lover is tedious. How the flush of a toilet serves as a warning: more emptiness to come." —T·É±ð²Ô³Ù²â-°¿²Ô±ð
I don't know if this is a thing but most of the poems I found in McCray's debut were Big Box poems. I mean, poems around a title that have as many disparate items and images thrown in to keep me (dear reader) pawing through and wondering, what's this? and, why is this in here? I liked his poems about his father the most.
A solid poetry collection by an immensely talented writer. "Twenty-One" was probably my absolute favorite in the collection and really spoke to me. McCary gives us a window into his life featuring poetry about love, lust, family, and friendship. It was also a quick read as I read it in about 45 mins. When I say that he is a fantastic writer, I say it with my whole chest.
In this debut collection, the poet explores his Korean-American identity, his parents� troubled histories, and a life lived with “an extravagance of small pauses/ many caesuras.� Puzzling titles.
Favorite Poems: “Bedtime Story #1â€� “Comfort Womanâ€� “N±ð³¦°ì²ú´Ç²Ô±ðâ€� “Burning Down Suburbiaâ€� “The Widowerâ€� “Type 2â€�
This was a really beautiful collection of poems. It felt like they became progressively more intimate as the book went on. He is particularly adept at conjuring atmosphere without being verbose.
Sjohnna McCray is telling the hard truths about toxic masculinity, racism, colonialism, deep and loving relationships, and parentage. It’s confronting and joyful.
It's an interesting read...I dont really know how to feel about it. I'm still figuring out if I like poetry at all at this point, so I'm completely unsure. It's good compared to some of the other poetry I've read? I do not know, I picked it up on a whim at the library and I'm not sure I'm the audience for this.
I feel oddly detached from this volume of poetry. For the first (roughly) third of the book, I was reading each poem and wondering aloud how this collection had won an award. By the middle of the book, I was hooked - finding several poems that I felt were excellent (The Nuclear Family and Price Check being my two stand-out favorites). The last third, though, left me back in unimpressed territory.
At no point did I think "This is bad poetry." Not at all. It is interesting, challenging stuff. But somehow I found myself wanting more throughout much of the book. I also personally feel that it misses a clear narrative path. With all of the verse being narrative and (I assume) personal, it also seemed oddly detached from its "self" for lack of better terminology and had no arc to speak of.
I'm not sure how I feel exactly. I think it is probably worth a second read for me at some point in time.
Out of curiosity, why do so many books of poetry come out with "Rapture" as the title? I know that it is a heavy, loaded word... But at this point, you would think that publishers would curtail it and tell their poets that they need a different title. (My favorite book of poetry with the title remains Susan Mitchell's Rapture...)
A collection of poems about identity, childhood, family, grief, and grace.
from How to Move: "when my brother takes the brown / almost black debris of father's life / into small hands that marvel // at catching spiders in jars, he is not afraid. / When we discover death, shaking / in the gravel driveway, he knows it"
An interesting small collection, very carefully wrought. I didn't feel very close to the speaker but these fell very much like experiential poems that you have to have a shared experience to really get into the emotion. The exception is "Rapture", the last poem in the book which is a seven-part development of the narrator's sexuality/partnership. Very raw and lovely
Rapture put me in a sort of trance and I had to put the book down after every few poems because they’re so powerful. Sjohnna McCray writes about family and fatherhood and home, and, man, did this collection leave me breathless.