This retrospective volume unflinchingly explores the author's complex experiences as a light-skinned black woman in America. . . . Derricotte's attention lingers on places of struggle where life is at its most vibrant, urgent, and surprising.-- "Publisher's Weekly Starred Review"
In this new and selected collection, Derricotte writes with her characteristic candor and grace. And Telly! Telly! Telly the goldfish, 'his swishy tail a magisterial emblem / of the Living God.' The 'i' of these poems is not afraid to love a goldfish, not afraid to write that love into poems full of trusting sincerity and deep connection. She knocks me out every time.-- "Camille Dungy, Orion"
No writer I know of explores with more honesty the sorrows and wonders and joys and shames and tenderness of being alive. No writer is more tender. And no poems I know of make me feel witnessed, held, beheld, the way Derricotte's do. Her poems behold us. I am so grateful for these poems. I am so grateful for Derricotte's beautiful heart.--Ross Gay
These exceptional new poems reveal one of America's strongest and most ardent poets mid-strife, on fire, charging forward toward all that is false in our lives and in our world. How endlessly grateful I feel that, once again, she has allowed us to accompany her.--Robin Coste Lewis
The new poems in Toi Derricotte's collection 'I' reveal that she has entered an entire new sphere as a poet, in which the struggles fall away and the spirits take her hands and float her forward. After years of wrestling with her demons, Derricotte has awakened--enlightened, serene, truth coming to her, through her, so casually. She has earned this grace with all her hard work, suffering and love.--Alicia Suskin Ostriker
'I' offers Derricotte a bit of Thoreau's doubleness, a chance to stand outside of her impressive body of work and view it anew. Thus the writer, much like the reader, has a fresh experience of 'All the years / of fear and raging / in my poems, the years I continued / in thankless silence -- until I was empty / of it...'--Kristofer Collins "Pittsburgh Magazine"
What song do you sing when you sing 'so low we can't hear you?' Toi Derricotte makes poetry of that song. It rises from 'the houses where you hear the least squealing, ' it is 'quieter than blossoms & near invisible.' It is filled with witness and love for our literal and literary families.--Terrance Hayes