Morgan Parker is a poet, essayist, and novelist. She is the author of the young adult novel Who Put This Song On?; and the poetry collections Other People's Comfort Keeps Me Up At Night, and Magical Negro, which won the 2019 National Book Critics Circle Award. Parker's debut book of nonfiction is forthcoming from One World. She is the recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts Literature Fellowship, winner of a Pushcart Prize, and has been hailed by The New York Times as "a dynamic craftsperson" of "considerable consequence to American poetry."
Morgan Parker''s bombastic second book profoundly expresses a black
millennial consciousness with anger and appetite. Everywhere Parker
looks, she sees a wildly messed-up world -- "There's far too many
of me dying"; "The President be like/ we lost a young boy today."
She also answers a personal and public mandate to re-envision it
through humor and confrontation.--NPR.org
"There are more beautiful things than Beyoncé self-awareness,
/Leftover mascara in clumps, recognizing a pattern/This is for all
the grown women out there/Whose countries hate them and their
brothers/Who carry knives in their purses down the street/Maybe
they will not get out alive/Maybe they will turn into air or news
or brown flower petals," writes Morgan Parker in the title poem of
her new collection, There Are More Beautiful Things Than Beyoncé.
If that doesn't pique your interest/make you feel something/have
you reexamining your negative attitude about poetry (get over it!),
check yourself for a pulse.--Portland Mercury
This singular poetry collection is a dynamic meditation on the
experience of, and societal narratives surrounding, contemporary
black womanhood. . . . Ranging from orderly couplets to an itemized
list titled after Jay Z's "99 Problems" to lines interrupted by
gaping white space, these exquisite poems defy categorization.--The
New Yorker
Employing fierce language and eschewing fear of unflattering light,
Parker (Other People's Comfort Keeps Me Up at Night) pays homage to
the deep roots and collective wisdom of black womanhood. Parker's
poems are as flame-forged as a chain locked around soft
ankles.--Publishers Weekly, Starred Review
Parker's poetry is a sledgehammer covered in silk, exposing black
women's vulnerability and power and underscoring what it means to
be magical and in pain. This collection is a must for anyone who
recognizes that celebrity is an extension of American culture --
and for those who don''t, it will transform their
perspective.--BuzzFeed
[A] brash, risqué collection that explores what it means to be a
black woman in contemporary American culture. Parker, whose first
book won the Gatewood Prize, is as self-assured as the women who
appear in these pages, including Queen Latifah, Nikki Giovanni and
Michelle Obama. Cultural references, old songs and classic poems
spark observations about feminism, sex and desire at a time when
"There's far too many of me dying./ The present is not so
different." . . . Each woman in this fierce collection wants to be
seen for who she is, not what society wants her to be, and each
demands respect.--The Washington Post
As unbelievable as you may find the title, There Are More Beautiful
Things Than Beyoncé proves that it is possible to create something
greater than Queen Bey. Riddled with pop culture references aimed
at exploring what it means to be a black American woman in modern
times, this beautiful poetry collection probes the realms of
American politics, national and family history, race, and gender
with unflinching honesty. As soulful as it is timely, There Are
More Beautiful Things Than Beyoncé is a daring collection you''''ll
want to bask in all year long.--Most Anticipated Feminist Book
Releases of 2017 "Bustle"
Easily one of the most compelling poetry collections of the past
few years, There Are More Beautiful Things Than Beyoncé is fresh,
unexpected, and intimate; an equally devastating and uplifting
exploration of black womanhood; and a tender and lovely celebration
of life.--Shondaland
I love these poems by Morgan Parker. They tell everything exactly
like it is, and they don''''t let us off the hook--about how we run
this country, about race, about how we spend our time . . . They
hit you with the authority and moral clarity of Langston Hughes,
and have the omnivorous eye of Frank O''''Hara.--Matthew Rohrer
Morgan Parker''s second book of poetry, There Are More Beautiful
Things Than Beyoncé (Tin House Books), isn't just the most
ferocious collection to be published this year. It's also an
antidote to the culture of hate and white supremacy . . . part
psychic excavation, part historical exorcism. Having watched Nina
Simone in concert on YouTube most of my adult life, I've finally
found an experience to compare that to.--Interview Magazine
Outstanding collection of poems. So much soul. So much intelligence
in how Parker folds in cultural references and the experiences of
black womanhood. Every poem will get its hooks into you. And of
course, the poems about Beyoncé are the greatest because Beyoncé is
our queen.--Roxane Gay
Parker weaves together Marvin Gaye lyrics, texting slang, and a
critical, caring perspective on black womanhood to createpoems that
are both radically powerful and laugh-out-loud funny.--VICE
Parker's bold, brilliant and biting poetry explores race, sex and
womanhood in contemporary culture.--Shelf Awareness
Parker's second collection . . . exquisitely examines American
values, often summoning its celebrities--Beyoncé, Michelle Obama,
Lou Reed--to illuminate society's staggering shortcomings and the
intricacies of black womanhood. . . . [T]hese poems are, without a
doubt, Parker's as she encapsulates vulnerability, feminism, and
utter fearlessness in rhythmic, glittering verse.--Booklist
The first thing you have to understand is that Morgan Parker is one
of the most fascinating poets working today. She writes poems that
are clever, beautiful, political, playful, breathtaking. The second
thing is that Beyoncé is one of the most potent icons in
contemporary popular culture. Now imagine what happens when those
two--poet and icon--meet in verse.--Book Riot
There are more beautiful things than Beyonce in these pages
because, as Morgan Parker writes in poems channeling the
president's wife, the Venus Hottentot and multiple Beyonces, "we're
everyone. We have ideas and vaginas, history and clothes and a
mother." The kind of verve the late New York school Ted Berrigan
would have called "feminine marvelous and tough" is here, as well
as the kind of vulnerability that fortifies genuine daring. This is
a marvelous book. See for yourself. Morgan Parker is a fearlessly
forward and forward-thinking literary star.--Terrance Hayes
These words, brilliant, lovely, and sharp like a diamond, cut me
deeply and left me in awe of Parker's writing. This book is an
exciting contribution to the rich legacy of Black feminist art,
literature, poetry, and music that daily adds more complex
representations of Black American womanhood.--Bitch Media
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