Mutiny, Phillip B. Williams
Mutiny, Phillip B. Williams
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Mutiny

Author: Phillip B. Williams

Narrator: Phillip B. Williams

Unabridged: 1 hr 55 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Penguin Audio

Published: 09/07/2021


Synopsis

Winner of the 2022 American Book Award
Finalist for the PEN/Voelcker Award for Poetry 
Longlisted for the PEN/Jean Stein Book Award
Finalist for Publishing Triangle’s Thom Gunn Award for Gay Poetry
Named one of the Best Books of 2021 by The Boston Globe and Lit Hub

From the critically acclaimed author of Thief in the Interior who writes with "a lucid, unmitigated humanity" (Boston Review), a startling new collection about revolt and renewal

Mutiny: a rebellion, a subversion, an onslaught. In poems that rebuke classical mythos and western canonical figures, and embrace Afro-Diasporanfolk and spiritual imagery, Phillip B. Williams conjures the hell of being erased, exploited, and ill-imagined and then, through a force and generosity of vision, propels himself into life, selfhood, and a path forward. Intimate, bold, and sonically mesmerizing, Mutiny addresses loneliness, desire, doubt, memory, and the borderline between beauty and tragedy. With a ferocity that belies the tenderness and vulnerability at the heart of this remarkable collection, Williams honors the transformative power of anger, and the clarity that comes from allowing that anger to burn clean.

About The Author

Phillip B. Williams is from Chicago, IL, and is the author of the book Thief in the Interior (Alice James, 2016). A recipient of the Kate Tufts Discovery Award, Lambda Literary Award, and Whiting Award, he has also received fellowships from the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University and the National Endowment for the Arts. He currently teaches at Bennington College and the Randolph College low-residency MFA.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Raymond

Favorite poems in this collection: "Final Poem for a King", "January 28, 1918", and "Shame". Quite a few lines stick with you after you read them. "We are captivated by the possibility of a freedom impossible to receive from the ones who promised it." -"January 28, 1918"......more

Goodreads review by Burgi

This book will knock you off your reading socks. The poems don't sparkle, they burn, right through any preconceived approaches. It's mutiny alright, of form and word. And what facility the poet shows with an inherited (as formal traditions) art and how he bends it his way. Powerful. The collection i......more

Goodreads review by pugs

a lot of jarring, uncomfortable material while reclaiming survival, not just for williams, but ancestors, with an echoing voice, reversing the shameful and tragic into joy and prosperity. the lines, dialogue from abuse, are most startling; if they're so memorable reading, i can't imagine how long th......more

Goodreads review by Colin

Williams' poem "January 28, 1918" is an explication/reexamination/'speculation' of the Porvenir, Texas Massacre of 1918, in which Texas Rangers, local Anglo ranchers, and members of the US Cavalry murdered 15 Mexican American men and boys. It's the kind of poem capable of showing the casual reader (......more

Goodreads review by David

This was a virtuosic collection of formally innovative and skillfully crafted poems, and the formal constraint harnesses and focuses the powerful emotions of the mutinies in the book. The poems speak out about white hypocrisy, rape culture and sexual abuse, the horrors of the middle passage, police......more


Quotes

Praise for Mutiny:

“The mutiny that gives Williams’s second collection its title is a wholesale rebellion against a culture that too often erases Black queerness; with punchy lines and formal play, the poems here make equal room for rage and tenderness.”
The New York Times Book Review

“Williams honors the power of rage.”
Essence

“These poems […] are beautiful in their language, in their subversion and rhetoric of questioning. They seem to be self-empowering in their farewells to oppressive tradition, standards, systems and structures.”
—Victoria Chang, New York Times Magazine

“Williams’s dense and intellectually ambitious second effort folds in triple rhyme, Shakespeare and Wallace Stevens, slave ship manifests, action sequences, erotic couplings, the music of Nina Simone, and a self-conscious long poem in which Williams ‘tried to rewrite’ T. S. Eliot. It’s a volume with something for everyone, justice for no one, and minor shocks everywhere.”
The Boston Globe

“[Mutiny] demonstrates the significance of writing for oneself in a world that often denies Black queer people personhood . . . From grief, death, and destruction, Williams spins gold. He resists false senses of security, instead offering readers room to sit in the flood of feeling that characterizes our daily reality. Absorbing even the most torrential emotional downpour at the current state of the world, Williams work builds a kingdom of queer splendor and satisfaction for the reader to rest in.”
them.

“Williams is one of the most inventive poets working today—at every turn, his writing surprises. Mutiny addresses the injustices of the history and present with declarative, clear, and powerful poems . . . In addition to holding a dynamic presence on the page, Williams’ lines are so sonically resonant that they demand to be spoken . . . This collection quickly became one of my favorites from this past year and, I’m sure, many years to come.” 
Corinne Segal, Lit Hub

“This book is for the ages. It hits on so many levels: urgency, complexity, formal inventiveness, depth of feeling, and pleasure in language . . . Sweeping and intimate, fierce and tender, visceral and virtuosic . . . Rage and pure passion jump off the page.”
The Adroit Journal

“[A] remarkable second collection . . . [Williams] writes powerfully about masculinity, Blackness, selfhood, anger, loneliness, and love . . . These poems shimmer with thematic heft without shying away from anger and disappointment. Balancing tenderness with rage, and love with pain, Williams offers a complex portrait of a speaker navigating a society whose history is one of brutality . . . These poems capture the resounding loneliness and grace that arrive after anger has burned away, while offering rewarding and memorable images that celebrate the opportunities to appreciate the chance for survival and renewal.”
Publishers Weekly (starrred)

Praise for Phillip B. Williams:


"[Williams] invites his audience into an intimacy that is brutal and yet inestimably generous in its confession and compassion . . . [He is] a voice for whom language is inadequate, yet necessarily grasped, shaped, and consumed. His devout and excruciating attention to the line and its indispensable music fuses his implacable understanding of words with their own shadows."
Boston Review

"[Williams] sings for the vanished, for the haunted, for the tortured, for the lost, for the place on the horizon where the little boat of the human body disappears in a wingdom of unending grace."
The Best American Poetry

"This gorgeous debut is a 'debut' in chronology only, a rare poetic event that transcends our expectations. Williams's poems embody balance: uncompromising and magnetic, surprising and intuitive. Need is everywhere—in the unforgiving images, in lines so delicatethey seem to break apart in the hands, and in the reader who will enter these poems and never want to leave."
Adrian Matejka, author of The Big Smoke, on Thief in the Interior