Uncompromising. Devastating. Ever radical. Danez Smith’s latest poetry collection, Bluff, proliferates with defiant imaginaries. Their heady verse speaks to the ordinary horror of our times – through survival, rage and longing. These poems are a homecoming, constellating around Minneapolis, Smith’s home town, in the wake of the protests following the murder of George Floyd. Smith homes in on the brutal foundations of American society, entwined with the US government’s imperial wickedness, our environmental crisis and the violence continually meted upon Black people. They also interrogate their own responsibility as a poet, in the face of the establishment. The poem less hope indicts how: “they clapped at my eulogies. they said, encore, encore. / we wanted to stop being killed & they thanked me for beauty / &, pitifully, i loved…
