Reader Score
88%
88% of readers
recommend this book
"Bailey invites us to see what twenty-first-century life is like for a young woman of the Black diaspora in the long wake of a history of slavery, brutality, and struggling for freedoms bodily and psychological."--Carl Phillips, from the Foreword
"Desiree C. Bailey sings true in her debut. Wherever this voice goes a Caribbean sun travels with it transfiguring what a maroon might overhear--a call awaiting response."--Yusef Komunyakaa
The 115th volume of the Yale Series of Younger Poets, What Noise Against the Cane is a lyric quest for belonging and freedom, weaving political resistance, Caribbean folklore, immigration, and the realities of Black life in America. Desiree C. Bailey begins by reworking the epic in an oceanic narrative of bondage and liberation in the midst of the Haitian Revolution. The poems move into the contemporary Black diaspora, probing the mythologies of home, belief, nation, and womanhood. Series judge Carl Phillips observes that Bailey's "poems argue for hope and faith equally. . . . These are powerful poems, indeed, and they make a persuasive argument for the transformative powers of steady defiance."
Natalie Diaz is a poet and language activist.
Tonight @ASU I’m lucky to be alongside Desiree Bailey and her beautiful book WHAT NOISE AGAINST THE CANE. Blue Print Series: The Architexts of Imagination and Craft is a conversation about internal poetics and momentums that inform the engineering and processes of poem-making. https://t.co/wcSOWWYFGa
Poetry, I too, like it | The nation's oldest poetry non-profit.
Congratulations Desiree C. Bailey (@DesireeCBailey), 2022 Four Quartets Prize Finalist, for her book What Noise Against the Cane, published by @yalepress. Read the judge's citation: https://bit.ly/3z3sWzo https://t.co/DulXOqfWeN
Finalist for the 2021 National Book Award for Poetry, sponsored by The National Book Foundation
Longlisted for the 2022 OCM Bocas Prize
Finalist for the 2022 Kate Tufts Discovery Award, sponsored by the Claremont Graduate School
Named One of the Best Books of 2021 by the New York Public Library
Longlisted for the 2022 Dylan Thomas Prize, sponsored by Swansea University
"Bailey invites us to see what twenty-first-century life is like for a young woman of the Black diaspora in the long wake of a history of slavery, brutality, and struggling for freedoms bodily and psychological."--Carl Phillips, from the Foreword
"Desiree C. Bailey sings true in her debut What Noise Against the Cane. Wherever this voice goes a Caribbean sun travels with it transfiguring what a maroon might overhear--a call awaiting response."--Yusef Komunyakaa