At every turn, Antrobus pushes back against flattening, against the tidy narrative--an invidious Ted Hughes poem gets radically revised, an aunt's misheard utterance becomes 'a faint fog horn, a lost river.' It's magic, the way this poet is able to bring together so much--deafness, race, masculinity, a mother's dementia, a father's demise--with such dexterity.--Kaveh Akbar
Emotionally textured and sonically charged. . . . the poem ['Sound Machine'] gyrates through interrogations of grief and ancestry twinned with a brooded meditation on masculinity and selfhood.--Ocean Vuong, author of On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous
This book is a gift, for how it repurposes my understanding of treacherous feelings, and shapes them into something worth sticking around for.--Hanif Abdurraqib, author of A Fortune For Your Disaster
The Perseverance is an insightful, frank and intimate rumination on language, identity, heritage, loss and the art of communication. . . . These are courageous autobiographical poems of praise, difficulties, testimony and love.--Malika Booker, author of Pepper Seed
Raymond Antrobus's compelling debut, The Perseverance, confronts deeply rooted prejudice against deaf people.-- "The Guardian"
The Perseverance relates Antrobus's experiences of being biracial and d/Deaf in sharp and beautiful poems. . . . These poems are expressive and beautiful and will leave readers thinking differently about sound and silence.-- "BuzzFeed"
Antrobus can be gentle, tactile, and pointed in this book--which collects into an affirmation, a pronouncement.-- "The Millions"
Outstanding.-- "Chicago Review of Books"
Antrobus's evocative, musical honesty is unforgettable.-- "Publishers Weekly, Starred Review"
Innovative and urgent. . . . Deserves a wide readership.-- "BookPage"
It channels Danez Smith, Malika Booker and Caroline Bird, in formal poems, erasures, free verse, innovative use of Makaton symbols, translation, prose, and a blackout version of Ted Hughes' 'Deaf School'; probably the best poem I read all year, and it doesn't even have any words in it.-- "Will Barrett, Poetry School"
Intimate and searching.-- "The New York Times Book Review"
An affecting, accessible, and astonishingly raw collection of poems.-- "October Hill Magazine"
A poet who traverses a diversity of worlds.-- "Colorlines"
Insightful.-- "Cool Hunting"
Remarkable. Antrobus, who was born deaf, writes about grief, race and violence in lines that are startlingly immediate and provocative.-- "The Washington Post"
Honest, raw and striking. . . . Antrobus captures the feeling of isolation that comes with navigating a world not made for everyone who exists within it.-- "Arkansas International"
Clear, unflinching. . . . We expand our comprehension of humanness in encountering these poems, and recognize the limits of language that is only spoken and heard--The Perseverance is language embodied and utterly present.-- "Orion Magazine, Khadijah Queen Recommends"
A memorable collection. . . . Antrobus interlaces wit and pathos as he examines his identity as a deaf British Jamaican man in a world between sign language and speech.-- "The Sunday Times"
Stunning.-- "New York Public Library"
An extraordinary debut.-- "Entropy Magazine"