Review
------
"The Ohio poet/critic digs deep into what it means to be American
in our moment ― and how much music has to do with it."
―Rolling Stone, The Best Music Books of 2018
"Rhythmic repetition makes for roaring passages that beg to be
read aloud, but for all his poetic muscularity, Abdurraqib
understands the value of linguistic economy."
―The Washington Post
"Abdurraqib writes about the music he holds dear, and the
experiences which have embedded this music in his life, with such
lyricism that the writing nears music itself―and his love of the
subject is palpable."
―Buzzfeed, Best Nonfiction Books Of 2017
"Abdurraqib explores America through its popular culture."
―Vol. 1 Brooklyn, 2017 Favorites
"With a voice that rings clear off the page, Abdurraqib is an
accomplished wordsmith, whose reflections on pop culture are
intensely personal, political and utterly compelling."
―CBC (Canada)
"Abdurraqib will make you think critically about music and the
culture it influences, and his thoughts will stay with you long
after you’ve tunneled through... his wonderful book."
―Stereogum, Recommended Reading 2017
"Poignant and important. Abdurraqib offers a perspective that
connects music, art, and memory, with the political realities of
our time."
―Esquire, Best Books of 2017
“Establishes Abdurraqib as a major rock critic―polished and deft
and original in a searchingly unpolished way."
―Robert Christgau, Barnes and Noble Review
"Funny, painful, precise, desperate, and loving throughout. Not a
day has sounded the same since I read him."
―Greil Marcus, Village Voice
"Essential, gripping reading."
―Tobias Carroll, Pitchfork
"A much-needed collection for our time. [Abdurraqib] has proven
to be one of the most essential voices of his generation.”
―Juan Vidal, NPR
"A collection of death-defying protest songs for the Black Lives
Matter era."
―Chicago Tribune, Best books of 2017
"Challenging and lyrical, his writing delivers compelling
observations in bite-sized pieces, allowing you to digest the
deeper ramifications of his ins."
―Paste, The 20 Best Nonfiction Books of 2017
"It’s a little bit of comfort when you think about it,
that... Abdurraqib has provided us with an essay collection that
might help make some small sense of what’s going on."
―Vol. 1 Brooklyn, 'Hanif Abdurraqib’s Great American Essay
Collection'
"Abdurraqib's poetic sentence makes me see fireworks in a new
way. It ingeniously reverses their motion: Instead of tendrils of
light exploding outward, overwriting the darkness, these
fireworks gather the darkness into themselves. They are like
teenagers stuffing their pockets with candy, ravenous for the
night. Violent illuminations arriving, out of nowhere, to hoard
the darkness. That would be something worth staring at."
―New York Times Magazine, Sam Anderson, 'New Sentences' column
"Abdurraqib unites familiar sounds with fresh observations about
music and the state of contemporary America... essential,
gripping reading."
―Pitchfork, 16 Favorite Music Books of 2017
"Abdurraqib places the reader in front of the performer and
commands them to see beyond the music, to glimpse the societal
impact of popular performers and indie heroes alike, and how they
reflect the culture that bears them."
―Pleiades Magazine
"Abdurraqib’s essay collection on the convergence of identity
politics, music, sports and culture feels important."
―National Post, The Best Books of the Year (2017)
"This tome stands as a bold statement for a great writer and a
complete breath of life from a rare thinker."
―New Noise Magazine
"One of the stand-out essay collections of 2017."
―The Los Angeles Review
"Abdurraqib writes facing his people... and draws the rest of us
to the circle’s edge with his discerning eye."
―Columbus Dispatch
"As powerful and touching as anything I’ve read this year, and
Abdurraqib has emerged as the Ta-Nehisi Coates of popular
culture."
―James Mann, The Big Takeover
"A collection of death-defying protest songs for the Black Lives
Matter era."
―Walton Muyumba, Chicago Tribune
"A penetrating and profoundly timely collection of essays. It is
music writing at its sharpest, most perceptive, and most
urgent... Most remarkable, perhaps, is Abdurraqib’s ability to
perceive and define connections between his subjects, himself,
and the fractured, complicated culture in which we live."
―Foreword Reviews (starred)
"Abdurraqib’s essay collection is mesmerizing and deeply
perceptive... filled with honesty, providing the reader with the
sensation of seeing the world through fresh eyes."
―Publishers Weekly (starred)
"Highly recommended."
―Library Journal (starred)
"Abdurraqib writes with uninhibited curiosity and in about
music and its ties to culture and memory, life and death, on
levels personal, political, and universal."
―Booklist (starred)
"A towering work full of inful observations about everything
from the legacy of Nina Simone to the music of Bruce
Springsteen... a powerful work about art, society, and the
perspective through which its author regards both."
―Electric Literature
"A joyful requiem―emphasis on joyful. Abdurraqib has written a
guide for the living as well as a memorial for those we have
lost."
―Los Angeles Review of Books
"Moving seamlessly from Fall Out Boy to Nina Simone, from Bruce
Springsteen to the death of Mike Brown, Abdurraqib centers this
masterful collection of essays not only around music and the way
it’s shaped and carried him through life, but the tiny sparks
that help us survive."
―Fanzine
"Some of the most dynamic writing about music I’ve ever read. The
way Abdurraqib ties the artists, concerts, and music culture he
is covering into current events can make you care about music you
have never even heard."
―Robert Sindelar, Board President, American Booksellers
Association (ABA)
"These are essays about music, but also about culture, race, and
life in America today."
―Book Riot, 20 Great Essay Collections from 2017
"Read this, then listen back―you’re sure to hear something new."
―W Magazine
"Erudite writing from an author struggling to find meaning
through music."
―Kirkus
"Certain writers can take a pop song or musician as their subject
and turn what they write into a stunning evocation of some aspect
of society. That’s very much the case with Hanif Abdurraqib, and
in this new collection he covers everything from the Columbus
punk scene to Chance the Rapper, coming up with stunning
observations along the way."
―Vol. 1 Brooklyn
"Uses [seemingly random moments] to try and explore some of the
most difficult questions about race, violence, and prejudice
facing Americans, specifically Americans of color, today."
―Bustle
"Hanif Abdurraqib's music writing possesses a singular,
impossible magic―he cracks open the very personal nature of
fandom with empathy and skepticism in equal measure."
―Jessica Hopper
"Abdurraqib bridges the bravado and bling of praise with the
blood and tears of elegy."
―Terrance Hayes
Read more ( javascript:void(0) )
About the Author
----------------
Hanif Abdurraqib is a poet, essayist, and cultural critic from
Columbus, Ohio. His poetry has been published in Muzzle, Vinyl,
PEN American, and various other journals. His essays and music
criticism have been published in The FADER, Pitchfork, The New
Yorker, and The New York Times. His first full length poetry
collection, The Crown Ain't Worth Much, was released in June 2016
from Button Poetry. It was named a finalist for the Eric Hoffer
Book Prize, and was nominated for a Hurston-Wright Legacy Award.
With Big Lucks, he released a limited edition chapbook, Vintage
Sadness, in summer 2017. His first collection of essays, They
Can't Kill Us Until They Kill Us, was released in winter 2017 by
Two Dollar Radio and was named a book of the year by Buzzfeed,
Esquire, NPR, Oprah Magazine, Paste, CBC, The Los Angeles Review,
Pitchfork, and The Chicago Tribune, among others. He is a
Callaloo Creative Writing Fellow, an interviewer at Union Station
Magazine, and a poetry editor at Muzzle Magazine. He is a member
of the poetry collective Echo Hotel with poet/essayist Eve Ewing.
His next books are Go Ahead In The Rain, a biography of A Tribe
Called Quest due out in 2019 by University of Texas Press, and
They Don't Dance No' Mo', due out in 2020 by Random House.
Read more ( javascript:void(0) )