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The BreakBeat Poets Volume 3

Halal If You Hear Me

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

The collected poems dispel the notion that there is one correct way to be a Muslim by holding space for multiple, intersecting identities while celebrating and protecting those identities.

Halal If You Hear Me features poems by Safia Elhillo, Fatimah Asghar, Warsan Shire, Tarfia Faizullah, Angel Nafis, Beyza Ozer, and many others.

Fatimah Asghar is the creator of the Emmy-Nominated web series Brown Girls, now in development for HBO. She is the author of If They Come For Us and a recipient of a 2017 Ruth Lilly and Dorothy Sargent Rosenberg Fellowship. She is a member of the Dark Noise Collective and a Kundiman fellow. In 2017, she was listed on Forbes's 30 Under 30 list.

Safia Elhillo is the author of The January Children. Sudanese by way of Washington, DC and a Cave Canem fellow, she holds an MFA from the New School. In 2018, she was awarded a Ruth Lilly and Dorothy Sargent Rosenberg Poetry Fellowship from the Poetry Foundation.

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    • Booklist

      April 1, 2019
      With the reverberations of walls and illegals bouncing off every news outlet, the third volume in the Breakbeat Poets series launched by poet Kevin Coval, editors Fatimah Asghar (If They Come for Us, 2018) and Safia Elhillo (The January Children, 2017) showcase poems that readily refute stereotypes, lies, xenophobia, and hate. Their anthology is a literary home for the Muslim community and a platform for female voices. As political debates rage over immigration policies and racism abounds, the poets in Halal respond with more thoughtful and resonant messages that speak to humanity in all of her beautiful shades. Organized into five sections honoring Muslim customs, these poems and prose pieces are brash, youthful, and colloquial, and readers do not have to be Muslim or female to comprehend and appreciate them. These politically aware, culturally rich, and socially conscious works speak to the greater good in all of its revealing variety: Muslim. Pakistani. Kashmiri. American. Queer. Lower-class. Femme. Orphan. Sometimes woman. Sometimes man. Sometimes neither. Disposable. A vibrant and invaluable masterpiece of plurality.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.)

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  • English

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