Best Barbarian: Poems by Roger Reeves
The poems in Best Barbarian roam across the literary and social landscape, from Beowulfs Grendel to the jazz musician Alice Coltrane, from reckoning with immigration at the USMexico border to thinking through the fraught beauty of the moon on a summer night after the police have killed a Black man.
Daring and formally elegant, Best Barbarian asks the reader: Who has not been an entryway shuddering in the wind / Of anothers want, a rose nailed to some dark longing and bled? Reeves extends his inquiry into the work of writers who have come before, conversing withand sometimes contradictingWalt Whitman, James Baldwin, Sappho, Dante and Aime Cesaire, among others. Expanding the tradition of poetry to reach from Gilgamesh and The Aeneid to Drake and Beyonce, Reeves adds his voice to a long song that seeks to address itself only to freedom.
Best Barbarian asks the reader to stay close as it plunges into catastrophe and finds surprising moments of joy and intimacy. This fearless, musical and oracular collection announces Roger Reeves as an essential voice in American poetry.