Knucklehead
Tony Keith Jr. Quill Tree, $19.99 (128p) ISBN 978-0-06-329605-3
Poet and educator Keith (How the Boogeyman Became a Poet) delivers a poignant, hip-hop-fueled collection of poetry that’s equal parts memoir, love letter, and rallying cry to Black boys. Often marginalized by society and labeled a “knucklehead” as a child, Keith highlights in this powerfully affirming assemblage the ability to use language as an essential force for rising above various societal challenges. Throughout, the self-proclaimed nerd (“for real for real, I wanna be known as that artsy-fartsy intellect”) tackles topics surrounding toxic masculinity, police violence, and generational trauma and invokes “the spirit of everything African within me” to declare freedom from these issues using varying poetic styles. Keith’s personal journey—including his adolescence as a Black gay youth living a camouflaged existence where “girl-friends were my girlfriend” and the freedom that came with living “onstage, unafraid”—is interwoven with poems depicting other Black boys’ treatment in a society that marks them from birth as targets. Searing language and palpable messaging permeate this dazzling, from-the-heart poetry collection that’s sure to inspire the eponymous knuckleheads and beyond to find their voice and use it for liberation. Ages 14–up. Agent: Annie Hwang, Ayesha Pande Literary. (Feb.)
Details
Reviewed on: 11/14/2024
Genre: Children's
Other - 128 pages - 978-0-06-329607-7