Praise for Besaydoo
Yalie Saweda Kamaras lucent poetry collection Besaydoo encircles matters of race, heritage, boundaries, and exchanging worry for hope. [. . .] Eloquent, proud, and discerning, the poems of Besaydoo preserve the wary splendor of lived experience.Foreword Reviews
I love this book.I mean, goddamn, Ilovethis book.I love how hard it tries, how much it loves, how it reaches and wonders and how it bears its bewilderment.I love how it sings, and how it talks.I love what it does with its hurt and its sorrow and its loss and its longing.And I love, maybe most of all, thatBesaydoois a prayer, a prayer for all of us, which Yalie Saweda Kamara reminds us a book sometimes can be.Ross Gay, author of The Book of Delights
Yalie Saweda Kamara makes it clear thatBesaydoois made with a sound that can only be made with otherswitnessing, living, trying to read. With exquisite attention and suppleness of mind, she writes a poetics of relation shimmering with simultaneity and wonder. This is a gorgeously fierce and tender workdeep, alongside, and ever with.aracelis girmay, author of the black maria
Sometimes, neighborhood is nation. And for the diasporic Black body, the City of Oakland is like a Station of the Cross. InBesaydoo,Yalie Saweda Kamara offers a love song dedicated to her hometown, a place shaped by humor, heartbreak, and humiliation. This debut poetry collection stands alone for its scope and aesthetic dexterity. Here, Kamara is radiant, tender, and true.Amaud Jamaul Johnson, author of Red Summer
Yalie Saweda KamarasBesaydoois a thrilling book of poems that begins and ends in Oakland, her hometown, the bucktoothed city that made you wish you never wore braces, but is steeped in her familys roots in Sierra Leone. Her perspective is international, multilingual (Krio and French), and her poems multi-layered, probing, joyous in their humor, serious about matters of the soul, and brilliantly inventive. They celebrate members of her family, especially her mother, but also various aunties. She extends that relationship to others, such as Aunty Nina, the singer Nina Simone, whose transformation of Bob Dylans Just Like Tom Thumbs Blues inspires Kamara to her own verbal music: a twirl of / cocoa nib & bergamot; an acre / of semisweet tenor notes. Her moving poems embrace others and tell their stories, from Nia Wilson to Marshawn Lynch, passionately taking their sides, standing up for justice. The book ends with an astonishingly powerful sequence about Aunty X and the son who commits suicide outside her front door, a haunting story told through the lens of magical realism, echoing Kamaras earlier insight that The dead only die when the living refuse to sing for them.The title poem, though, sets the tone for the whole book, with its newly coined word thats a benediction given to those she loves.Besaydooembraces us all.John Philip Drury, author ofThe Tellers Cage
Refreshing and innovative, Yalie Saweda KamarasBesaydoo, fearlessly meets and challenges two contradictory ideals. With insistent rhythms and reasonings, her writing is rooted in her first-generation American experience. In some poems, we hear Krio words that resonate and evoke memory of Sierra Leone, in which I too long to taste Sierra Leones krain-krain stew. In others, she captures both the joy and pain of the USA, particularly Oaklanda killing field they saywhile acknowledging the complexity of place: and yes we mourn but let us celebrate too. Whether one knows Sierra Leone, Oakland, or this collections other locales, these poems are a pleasure to read, as they reveal Kamaras life, her thoughts, and yes, her very identity.AnniDomingo, author ofBreaking the Maafa Chain
Besaydooas poem,Besaydooas book,Besaydooas worldview melts me in delicious and curative ways. Yalie Saweda KamarasBesaydootraverses acrobatics of liberatory reclamations, language as home, riotous celebrations, gospels of magic and chorus, odes, body as dirge, haikus where a bus becomes an altar for Truth, soliloquy of addiction, polyvocality, family faith dynamics, and fierce love poems to Oakland, beloveds, Blackness, Agatha Kamara, Nina Simone, Gabby Douglas, places, memories, and more. The voices fight against the detrimental culling of white supremacy and Empire with the knowing, I will be misread / and misheard and what that means for descendants of migration, where voices sift through what grief means in the hyphen of my African and American throat and the constant expectation of wounds. Kamara writes, the long-lostmefound the small, brownI and asks, What hand guided me through an evening of one thousand/ almost deaths? These voices understand that one is not alonewhen one is a conduit of those who came before, to pave the wayin an ancestral lineage where past is pulsatingly present. Kamaras poetry crushes the heartthen makes you hold the fractals in your trembling hand, while gently guiding your fingers to stitch each node, each valve, each vessel, each chamber back into the chest cavity until you realize, this heartthis plurality of heartscan never be destroyed. Kamara writes something about praise being messy and I bring this praise with me, as I incant KamarasBesaydoofor each of us into the inevitable mess.FeliciaZamora, author ofI Always Carry My Bones
"This is a thunderclap of a collection so vast in scope, so powerful of voice, so nuanced, so gorgeously evocative that it leaves you wrung out, astounded, and certain that Yalie Saweda Kamara is inimitable and indispensable.Dave Eggers
Praise for When the Living Sing
A luminescent collection. To read Yalie Saweda Kamaras first book is to welcome a wholly original new voice into the American chorusa searching, joyful, wry, aching voiceand know she will be heard from as long as she has breath.Dave Eggers, author of The Every
When The Living Sing is a stunning and lush collection, teeming with bright music. Here, the mouth is a doorway and a dirge to what beckons and consumes the speakers tongue declaring, I become a lyre bird mimicking their sound, unsure of what grief means in the hyphen of my African and American throat. Here, the pulpy lava bullet of the malombo fruit tethers memory to family in Sierra Leone and Oakland, California. Here, the elegy is housed in the sanctuary of praise by traversing the distances woven with slices of Krio, Black death, and always finding joy amidst sorrow. Yalie Saweda Kamara is a poet with a gorgeous and wild imagination that conjures the opal hue of Gods touch and the blueberry gauze of nightfall. I never wanted the chapbook to end.Tiana Clark, author of I Can't Talk About the Trees Without the Blood
Praise for A Brief Biography of My Name
There are moments in Yalie Kamaras A Brief Biography of My Name where the words disappear, leaving the reader with nothing but feeling, and the sound of their own breathing. Subjects of her poems grab the mike, speaking back to her. Her poems cross the distance between the poets memory and the readers mind, creating an intimacy that is not always pleasurable, even if always truthful...Kamaras voice emanates from the pages, recalling the oral origins of poetry; an affirmation of community; a sound that crumbles defenses and rationality; sure as a drum, as an instrument; from the opening poem until the last line dies into the silence that birthed it. This is life, given a proper and delicious weight.Phillippa Yaa de Villiers, writer and performance artist, author of Original Skin
"The meaning of the word Besaydoo is, at the same time, secret and public. It is a shared codea blessing for those who know. And so is this book with the same name. Yalie Saweda Kamara has built a bridge between Sierra Leone and Oakland, or, even more truly, she has become the bridge between cultures, languages, family, and history. This is a fascinating collection of poetry that explores the joy, sadness, and confusion of being a first-generation American. It is a book with shocking moments expressed with luminous intelligence, variant music, and changing poetic structuresa masterfully crafted debut. Thanks to Besaydoo Yalie Saweda Kamara is now part of the literary tradition of both the United States and Sierra Leone. Her word belongs everywhere, and everything belongs to her poems."Manuel Iris, author of The parting present/Lo que se ira