ABOUT THIS BOOKCrystal Simone Smith’s new poetry collection, Runagate, reimagines the experiences of enslaved and formerly enslaved persons in a stark and chilling response to the archives of chattel slavery: bills of sale, interviews, narratives, and fugitive runaway ads. Embodying the aesthetics and Japanese poetic forms haiku and tanka, her poems bear witness to the brutal and horrifying treatment of enslaved people and contrast their humanity with the inhumanity of their enslavers. In these poems, fugitive persons evade slave patrol hounds by climbing magnolia trees, use the cover of night and the detritus of a shipwreck to swim to freedom, and find temporary refuge in a cabin where a woman offers bread and water. Throughout, Smith poignantly envisions their flights to freedom—passages that were fueled by love, hope, and impossible dreams. She unceasingly to gives voice those who found courage in both bondage and freedom. In Runagate, the enslaved regain their stories and return to the sensory world.
REVIEWS“Runagate is a collection of poems that looks the harsh truths of slavery in the eye and turns its savagery into sorrow songs and temples of beauty. Crystal Simone Smith refuses to abstract the dead. She illuminates our human capacities to be virtuous or lethal, to still ourselves or steal our freedom. Her artful narratives about slavery are powerfully imagined because the poet deals in facts and truths about American slavery that few have told with this much clarity.”
-- Timothy B. Tyson, author of The Blood of Emmett Till
“In this engaging experiment in archive interpretation and poetic form, Crystal Simone Smith centers the voices of freedom seekers and survivors of US chattel enslavement with an intimacy and simplicity that gives these ancestors room to breathe. Each poem quiets the reader and bids her to listen longer.”
-- Alexis Pauline Gumbs, author of Survival Is a Promise: The Eternal Life of Audre Lorde