"Richard Hamilton's Discordant at times synthesizes a war correspondent's urgent observations with a poet's ability to invent fresh syntax." -- Washington Independent Review of Books "The poems of Discordant will haunt you--like a tune that orients your ear to what you weren't attuned to, like a cut that slices through the noisy distractions of the day. Richard Hamilton is chopping up language, rewriting the score on poetic forms, and dissecting our racist-capitalist society at the same time, mixing and mingling the discourses of philosophy, culture, politics, healthcare, labor, and love, until we remember they all occupy and describe the same world. I'm grateful for this piercing, necessary voice." --Evie Shockley, author of suddenly we "In his new, trenchant collection Discordant Richard Hamilton brings the fire where and when it is needed, writing poems that startle in their originality, playfulness, and sociopolitical depth and gravitas. If the best poetry provides a way to see with new, engaged eyes, Discordant does so in poem after poem, and reminds us that Hamilton, an invaluable voice in contemporary Black queer poetry, is one of the freshest and most committed poets writing today." --John Keene, author of Punks: New and Selected Poems " Discordant is a clarion call. A genius voyage through late twentieth and twenty-first century American wasteland laid from the fallout of war.
A testimony from the forgotten spaces of addiction, poverty, and racism. A dispatch from the shadows of the civil rights movement, where promises that quelled uprisings are daily disintegrating. In the tradition of James Baldwin and Fred Hampton, this poet is fearless in his words. Few understand how to make language unsettle and disrupt as Richard Hamilton does. The poems are gorgeous. They are also startling, haunting, and gritty. To my mind, this book is a game changer." --francine j.
harris, author of Here is the Sweet Hand.