An American Sunrise: Poems
An American Sunrise: Poems book cover

An American Sunrise: Poems

Price
$13.31
Format
Hardcover
Pages
144
Publisher
W. W. Norton & Company
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1324003861
Dimensions
5.8 x 0.7 x 8.6 inches
Weight
10.8 ounces

Description

"Full of celebration, crisis, brokenness, and healing." ― Daisy Fried, New York Times "If you only read one book of poems this summer, make it An American Sunrise .... Every step of the journey is deeply moving... Rich and deeply engaging, An American Sunrise creates bridges of understanding while reminding readers to face and remember the past." ― Elizabeth Lund, Washington Post "While the subject matter of her new poems continuously hits you in the gut, Harjo brings a sense of resilience to that dark history." ― Christian Allaire, Vogue "Radiant... [A] profound, brilliantly conceived song cycle celebrating ancestors, present and future generations, historic endurance and fresh beginnings." ― Jane Ciabattari, BBC " An American Sunrise is a wisdom quest as Joy Harjo returns to the place of her ancestors. This haunting and breathtaking book invokes the relocation of the southeastern peoples, of what they endured and lost. Harjo is a visionary and a truth sayer, and her expansive imagination sweeps time, interpolating history into the present. She writes: 'Rivers are the old roads, as are songs, to traverse memory.' Creating a confluence of words, a new language for storytelling arises. An American Sunrise is a powerful tour de force." ― Elise Paschen, author of The Nightlife "Resplendent and reverberating... Harjo's bracing political perspective is matched by timeless wisdom... In clarion, incantatory poems that recalibrate the heart and mind, Harjo conveys both the endless ripples of loss and the brightening beauty and hope of the sunrise." ― Booklist Praise for Joy Harjo: "Fueled by a deep musicality and the indelible spirit, the poems of Joy Harjo are at once voraciously inventive and powerfully human…These are poems that hold us up to the truth and insist we pay attention." – Jackson Poetry Prize citation, judged by Ada Limón, Alicia Ostriker, and D. A. Powell "[Joy Harjo’s] poetry is light and elixir, the very best prescription for us in wounded times." – Sandra Cisneros, The Millions "Joy Harjo is one of the real poets of our mixed, fermenting, end-of-century imagination" – Adrienne Rich "Joy Harjo is a giant-hearted, gorgeous, and glorious gift to the world. Her belief in art, in spirit, is so powerful, it can’t help but spill over to us―lucky readers" – Pam Houston Joy Harjo is a member of the Muscogee (Creek) Nation. She is the author of nine poetry collections and two memoirs, most recently Poet Warrior. The recipient of the 2023 Ivan Sandrof Lifetime Achievement Award, the 2023 Bollingen Prize for American Poetry, and the 2017 Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize, she lives in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • National Bestseller A stunning new volume from the first Native American Poet Laureate of the United States, informed by her tribal history and connection to the land.
  • In the early 1800s, the Mvskoke people were forcibly removed from their original lands east of the Mississippi to Indian Territory, which is now part of Oklahoma. Two hundred years later, Joy Harjo returns to her family’s lands and opens a dialogue with history. In
  • An American Sunrise
  • , Harjo finds blessings in the abundance of her homeland and confronts the site where her people, and other indigenous families, essentially disappeared. From her memory of her mother’s death, to her beginnings in the native rights movement, to the fresh road with her beloved, Harjo’s personal life intertwines with tribal histories to create a space for renewed beginnings. Her poems sing of beauty and survival, illuminating a spirituality that connects her to her ancestors and thrums with the quiet anger of living in the ruins of injustice. A descendent of storytellers and “one of our finest―and most complicated―poets” (
  • Los Angeles Review of Books
  • ), Joy Harjo continues her legacy with this latest powerful collection.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(458)
★★★★
25%
(191)
★★★
15%
(114)
★★
7%
(53)
-7%
(-53)

Most Helpful Reviews

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A Book of Truth and Beauty

It is perfect Joy Harjo is now our poet laureate, and this beautiful new collection of poetry shows why. Both personal vision and historical reflection, An American Sunrise takes in the troubled events that brought us here and makes from an unflinching gaze a healing prayer. “Through the immense and terrible echo of injustice, a meadow bird sang and sang.” This book is that song.
27 people found this helpful
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If poetry is musical language, this book is a master symphony of cultural conflict.

Joy Harmony’s American Sunrise amazed me through evoking powerful feelings of loss, grief, resignation, anger, acceptance of life and self-determination, and finally renewal. The masterful use of language pushes and pulls the reader/listener into a dream state of vision and reality mixed together and called a history of our life.
I experienced tears too often. I was surprised by laughter at times. I felt loss and pain. I appreciate renewal of my spirit. I now better understand self-determination.
This book led me to a poet, author, and performer I am sincerely enjoying through her published works. My life is enriched.
16 people found this helpful
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Beautiful, lyrical, embodied in the life of the world

Joy Harjo’s wirk is pure genius. She is rightfully being recognized as poet laureate of the United States.
14 people found this helpful
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Wonderful collection of poems!

Joy Harjo is a perfect choice for Poet Laureate of the United States. Her honest, sincere and lovely voice is welcome amid the storm of insanity and inanity we are suffering through at the moment.
10 people found this helpful
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There is a reason she’s the poet laureate

The words come alive off the page
9 people found this helpful
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Beautifully sad but also joy

An extraordinary set of poems by our new poet laureate in which she reflects on an excursion she made back to Georgia to the beginning of her ancestors Trail of Tears. Very sad but there are at times joy as well in what family means and brings to her family.
6 people found this helpful
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Will make you think.

What an amazing poet!
5 people found this helpful
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an american history

you could say that this is joy harjo’s time. she’s the poet laureate of united states for 2019 and this book has the attention of a wider audience and greater media attention. in a couple of senses, joy harjo has been around for a long time. as a poet, publishing for decades, slowly accumulating awards, though not known to casual readers of poetry.

as a member of the msvkoke, the moscogee creek nation, her roots go back more than two hundred years. in her poems about her ancestry she evokes a timelessness within the undying spirit she carries from the stomp dancers, the shell shakers, in an unbroken tradition, which she shares in her songs and poetry.

the poverty of which she writes is the result of government policies against american tribal nations, the disruption of a way of life and relocation of entire communities under the presidency of andrew jackson.

‘Do not return,
We were warned by one who knows things
You will only upset the dead.
They will emerge from the spiral of little houses
Lined up in the furrows of marrow
And walk the land.
There will be no place in memory
For what they see
The highways, the houses, the stores of interlopers
Perched over the blood fields
Where the dead last stood.’

‘We are still in mourning.

The children were stolen from these beloved lands by the government.
Their hair was cut, their toys and handmade clothes ripped
From them. They were bathed in pesticides
And now clean, given prayers in a foreign language to recite
As they were lined up to sleep alone in their army-issued cages.’

‘Grief is killing us. Anger tormenting us. Sadness eating us with disease.
Our young women are stolen, raped and murdered.
Our young men are killed by the police, or killing themselves and each other.’

‘This is a warning:
Heroin is a fool companion offering freedom from the gauntlet of history.
Meth speeds you past it.
Alcohol, elixir of false bravado, will take you over the edge of it.
Enough chemical and processed craving
And you can’t push away from the table.

If we pay enough, maybe we can buy ourselves back.’
3 people found this helpful
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Inspirational read for any native readers....

I love Joy Harjo’s work, great to see her as the Poet Laureate
3 people found this helpful
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Our poet laureate reflects on her American Indian heritage.

This poetry collection had our book club in tears and laughter. We are from Oklahoma so have known Joy Harjo for a long time. We’re so proud of her. Listen to her music on YouTube.
2 people found this helpful