grieveland
  • Home
  • ABOUT / CONTACT
  • books
  • NO RSVP
  • submissions
  • SMALL GARDEN READING SERIES.
  • Home
  • ABOUT / CONTACT
  • books
  • NO RSVP
  • submissions
  • SMALL GARDEN READING SERIES.
Picture

Unto Dogs by Stephanie Ginese

$20.00
full length book of poetry — 6 x 9 | 64 pp.
release date: July 23rd, 2022
ISBN: 978-1-7353527-7-0


***


“ if you are ready to know salvation
at the cost
of a most merciless truth  
because everything has a price 
my dear. ” 




Stephanie Ginese's Unto Dogs is a faithful pursuit of agency under imperial rule. With slick humor and radical honesty, she explores the violent and feminine history of a body and island seeking sovereignty from colonial powers. This collection is a searing revelation of confession, mythos, and truth. 






***
Stephanie Ginese is a writer & wannabe comedian from South Lorain, Ohio. She is the daughter of a Puerto Rican mother & an Italian immigrant father. She currently lives in Cleveland, by the lake, with her two children. Find her at: www.sginese.com
 

We Are Owed. by Ariana Brown

$20.00

*** International orders have been temporarily suspended ( anything outside of US ). Check back for updates!



full length book of poetry — 6 x 9 | 98 pp.

release date: July 29th, 2021

ISBN: 978-1-7353527-6-3

DIGITAL EDITION: here




We Are Owed. is the debut poetry collection of Ariana Brown, exploring Black relationality in Mexican and Mexican American spaces. Through poems about the author’s childhood in Texas and a trip to Mexico as an adult, Brown interrogates the accepted origin stories of Mexican identity. We Are Owed asks the reader to develop a Black consciousness by rejecting U.S., Chicano, and Mexican nationalism and confronting anti-Black erasure and empire-building. As Brown searches for other Black kin in the same spaces through which she moves, her experiences of Blackness are placed in conversation with the histories of formerly enslaved Africans in Texas and Mexico. Esteban Dorantes, Gaspar Yanga, and the author’s Black family members and friends populate the book as a protective and guiding force, building the “we” evoked in the title and linking Brown to all other African-descended peoples living in what Saidiya Hartman calls “the afterlife of slavery.”





Ariana Brown is a queer Black Mexican American poet from the Southside of San

Antonio, TX. She is the author of the poetry chapbook Sana Sana (Game Over Books,

2020). Ariana’s work investigates queer Black personhood in Mexican American

spaces, Black relationality and girlhood, loneliness, and care. She holds a B.A.

in Mexican American Studies and African Diaspora Studies from UT Austin, an M.F.A.

in Poetry from the University of Pittsburgh, and an M.L.S. in Library and Information

Science from the University of North Texas (2022). Ariana is a 2014 national collegiate

poetry slam champion and owes much of her practice to Black performance

communities led by Black women poets from the South. She has been writing,

performing, and teaching poetry for over ten years. Lesson plans, Spanish

translations of her poems, and other resources are available on her website at

arianabrown.com.

ZOETROPE by Kevin Latimer

$20.00

full length book of poetry — 6 x 9 | 89 pp.

release date: 8 . 8 . 20

cover: Angelo Maneage

ISBN: 978-1-7353527-0-1

digital edition available here



praise for ZOETROPE:


"In times that seem unimaginable, the imagination can become necessary to our survival—and to our understanding of death. Kevin Latimer’s debut collection of poetry, Zoetrope, continually asserts the productive potential of imaginative transformation, while exploring the complexity of fantasy in a landscape of horrific news and disheartening labor." - Zach Savich in The Kenyon Review


" Ultimately, this is the revolutionary nucleus of the book: that justice and love for Black life is a fulcrum to transform the world, to bring imagination and creation — the escapes and explorations and ascensions — into something more than tragic flight. " - R.M. Haines in Glass Poetry


"The zoetrope is the simulacrum of movement. The eye animates, the imagination sustains, and through this apparatus, the image is given life. Kevin Latimer’s Zoetrope is a vividly grieving machine, but “this is not a disaster story.” “Am I alive now?” the poems ask, knowing that “a boy in space is all the rage,” while landing means inhabiting a world where “capital punishments” abut “weird edges.” “Hellions / everywhere.” Helium too. It’s the atmosphere. Violence *is* the cosmology, Neptune says. And then: “No one / is shooting & that / is not a mistake.” It’s bad optics for the authorities. “And then the marches begin.” It’s good to be on the move. Look around: just a little darker now past the turn of days. “Little did they know in the depths.” But then, the wisest say, you read. And when you do, find poems, like these, with teeth: it’s “the only way god knows how to show himself.” -- Bill Carty, author of HUGE CLOUDY



"...when I read Kevin’s work, I’m reminded of that feeling that, I think transcends any other feeling while reading poetry — I’m reminded of what a poem can do. To be reminded of that is such a beautiful thing. It’s that feeling when you read a poet break a line mid-word, or deliver in 5 lines what you’ve tried to do in 100, or deliver in 100 lines what you thought could only be 5, or refuse punctuation, or re-use punctuation, or shift perspective, tone, dialogue, anything, I don’t care — to read poetry is to have the potential to be reminded of what a poem can do. And to read Kevin Latimer’s poetry is to always be reminded of what a poem can do." - Devin Gael Kelly on VERTIGO.

​

"In Latimer’s ZOETROPE, “joy & grief are dancing on every sidewalk,” and there’s a sky, pink and filled with balloons, and there’s a boy dancing into and through a world where a black boy “run[s] from the police,” where “Tamir rips dandelions from the street,” and where daisies grow in grounds drenched in death. And even so, Latimer creates a world where black boys fly & dream & live & become astronauts that “dance around the sun.” “I want to speak to all this bigness” asserts Latimer. And he does..." - Noor Hindi, author of Dear God, Dear Bones, Dear Yellow



*


excerpts:

jubilat

wax nine records

poetry northwest


​

"[ black ] boy in space is all the rage 

on the evening news.



in space, your body means 

your body & that’s it. 



in space, i am stuffing a comet 

into my mouth, look at that!"



ZOETROPE, Kevin Latimer's first collection of poetry is a frantic protest set in a grieving and illogical world. These poems and poem-plays examine what it is to be black and grieving in America. At the end: some place, no disasters exist. a world full of rituals, boats, political strife, umbrellas, & boys


​*


Kevin Latimer is a poet and playwright. His poems can be found in Ninth Letter, jubilat, Poetry Northwest, Passages North, & elsewhere. His plays have been produced by convergence-continuum. Along with Brendan Joyce he co-organizes GRIEVELAND, a poetry project. He has won scholarships, fellowships, & awards from The Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art, Cleveland State University, The Juniper Summer Writing Institute, & Twelve Literary Arts. He is the author of ZOETROPE (2020). He lives in Cleveland, Ohio

Love & Solidarity by Brendan Joyce

$20.00

full length book of poetry — 6 x 9

release date: 9. 3. 20

cover: Matt Mitchell

digital version here

​

Originally released digitally as “Unemployment Insurance” on International Labor Day, Brendan Joyce’s full-length Love & Solidarity arrives on 9/3/2020 with reworked poems from the original release & a third section, exit strategies, which explores the summer of insurrection, mass death & love. 


“If we’re going to have this conversation

 it’s going to be in politicians on fire.”


Bio: Brendan Joyce is a poet from Cleveland, Ohio. His poems have appeared in Johannesburg Review of Books, The Brooklyn Rail & Pandemic Publications & on Twitter.


PRESS
Zach Savich on ZOETROPE in the Kenyon Review
Sarah Beddow on Character Limit in Tinderbox

"Filled with Longing and Rage" a review of Love & Solidarity  in Cleveland Review of Books
“Letter to Yanga, from Six-Year-Old Ariana” in LITHUB
(for ARC's, reviews, and inquiries email at grieveland@gmail.com)
  • Home
  • ABOUT / CONTACT
  • books
  • NO RSVP
  • submissions
  • SMALL GARDEN READING SERIES.