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Today's poem is "Mayflower"
from Abide

Southern Illinois University Press

Jake Adam York was an associate professor of English at the University of Colorado-Denver until his untimely death in December 2012. He published three books of poems, Murder Ballads (2005), A Murmuration of Starlings (SIU Press, 2008), and Persons Unknown (SIU Press, 2010), and his poems appeared in various journals, including Blackbird, Diagram, Greensboro Review, Gulf Coast, H_NGM_N, New Orleans Review, Shenandoah, and Southern Review.

Other poems by Jake Adam York in Verse Daily:
November 22, 2010:   "Self-Portrait in the Town Where I Was Born" "The smell of the ocean..."

Books by Jake Adam York:

Other poems on the web by Jake Adam York:
Two poems
Three poems
Four poems
Four poems
Six poems
Two poems
"Self-Portrait as Superman (Alternate Take)"
"Elegy for James Knox"
Two poems
Seven poems

Jake Adam York's Website.

Jake Adam York According to Wikipedia.

About Abide:

"In his body of work, poems of sheer beauty, grace, precision of image, and technical skill, we find a profound intervention into our ongoing conversations about race and social justice, a bold and necessary challenge to our historical amnesia. Jake Adam York is one of our most indispensible American poets, and the presence of his work in the world—his vision, his enduring spirit—is for me, and I think for us all, a guiding light."
—Natasha Trethewey

"Jake Adam York was the finest elegist of his generation, and his ongoing project, an intricately layered threnody for the martyrs of the civil rights movement, also made him one of the most ambitious poets of that generation. And surely his early and sudden death was an immense loss to the poetry of our moment. It is thus bittersweet to observe that this posthumous collection is his finest—informed by a tender lyric acuity, and an ability to interweave the fraught history of his native South with an autobiographical authority that is searching and celebratory by turns. Abide is, in short, a marvel."
—David Wojahn

"There’s a reason why antebellum mansions still serve, not as museums dealing with the ugliness of slavery, but as popular backdrops for wedding receptions, the kind celebrated by Paula Deen recreating the 'glory' of Gone With the Wind and it has everything to do with an unwillingness to deal with the past openly and honestly… York’s poetry is important because of the way that it attacks that unresolved history and refuses to let the longstanding narrative go unchallenged, and it does so from a position of power that makes it difficult for the privileged to ignore it the way they do similar work from poets of color who work in the same thematic spaces."
The Rumpus



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