Jake Adam York

Jake Adam York Poems

1.

Forgive me if I forget
with the birdsong and the day's
last glow folding into the hands
...

Night's air tightens slowly, afternoon's
heat thinning with honeysuckle -
millions of trumpets of sun
...

To Yusef Komunyakaa
When I rise from the bank
...

Six weeks since that whisper rose
into the window of a stage
behind the Half Note's bar,
...

Did your right hand itch when I transcribed your O
don't you hear me cryin? phrase I'd pay a hundred dollars
to raise my voice into, cause you got money for sure,
...

To Sun Ra, from Earth
You are not here,
you are not here
...

7.

Glyph for dry
for hope and
false hope.
...

When you ask, I'll want to say maybe—
maybe I have been here before,
family tour, class trip hemmed
in the back of the bus, or maybe
...

Does the river, after
it's come apart,
still hold the drowned
hand's tremble, still
...

10.

The moss never falls.
However gray,
it hangs like shirts
left to weather and rag
...

The rope grips the iron
where the iron bites into its hold.
A noose of rust, dried blood.
...

Hour of setting, hour of setting
out, how sweet such endings
bear the edge Almost - taste
should, should thousands - nights
...

If we could take them back,
swinging by the Little Kitchen's shadow
on Jefferson Street and waving them in
...

Clear till it hits the bend
where we work the village
out of clay, where post-molds graph
the longhouses' outlines in ash
...

15.

The bike, the handlebars, the fork,
spoked wheels still spinning off sun,
still letting go his weight as he
lay in the grass along Docena Road
...

16.

Because my grandmother made me
the breakfast her mother made her,
when I crack the eggs, pat the butter
on the toast, and remember the bacon
...

The sleeve sighs from the jacket,
the record from the sleeve.
The needle takes its breath.
...

While he slept, I read my father's books
brought home from the furnace,
traced the diagrams—channels, ladles of iron,
...

Welcome to Jackson: City of Grace and Benevolence
City of Grace, you open,
you part your curtains
...

The sheriff says it wasn't Till we pulled from the river,
that man was as white as I am, white as cotton
blowed by the cotton gin fan that weighed him down,
...

Jake Adam York Biography

Jake Adam York (August 10, 1972 – December 16, 2012) was an award-winning American poet. He published three books of poetry before his death: Murder Ballads, which won the 2005 Elixir Prize in Poetry; A Murmuration of Starlings, which won the 2008 Colorado Book Award in Poetry; and Persons Unknown, an editor's selection in the Crab Orchard Series in Poetry. A fourth book, Abide, was released in 2014. That same year he was also named a posthumous recipient of the Witter Bynner Fellowship by the U.S. Poet Laureate. York was born in West Palm Beach, Florida in 1972 to David and Linda York, who worked respectively as a steelworker and history teacher.[1] Shortly after York's birth he and his parents moved back to Alabama, where five generations of York's family had lived. York spent the rest of his youth in Gadsden, Alabama, where he lived in a rural house and shared a bedroom with his brother, Joe. York was a big fan of rap music, including LL Cool J and Run DMC, and covered his bedroom in posters of his favorite rappers. As his brother Joe later said, Jake was a "15-year-old kid in northeast Alabama in 1988, where white boys didn't listen to rap. But he did, and he loved it. Listening to those guys really tapped into his love of playing with language. He went to college to become an architect, but after two quarters at Auburn — and he was an A student — he became more interested in the architecture that holds our lives together." York graduated from Southside High School in Gadsden in 1990 and that year started at Auburn University, where he eventually earned a B.A. in English. He then received his M.F.A. and Ph.D. in creative writing and English literature from Cornell University. York worked as an Associate Professor at the University of Colorado Denver, where he was an editor for "Copper Nickel", a nationally recognized student literary journal he also helped found. In the Spring of 2011, York was the Richard B. Thomas Visiting Professor of Creative Writing at Kenyon College. During the 2011-2012 academic year, he was a Visiting Faculty Scholar at Emory University's James Weldon Johnson Institute for the Study of Race and Difference. In addition, York served as a founding editor for storySouth and as a contributing editor for Shenandoah. He also founded the online journal Thicket, which focused on Alabama literature. In 2005, when fiction writer Brad Vice was accused of plagiarism in his short story collection The Bear Bryant Funeral Train, York took the lead in defending the author. Vice was accused of plagiarizing part of one of his stories from the 1934 book Stars Fell on Alabama by Carl Carmer. However, York noted that Vice had allowed the short story and the similar section from Carmer's original book to be published side by side in York's literary journal Thicket. To York, this action by Vice "implicitly acknowledges the relationship (and) allows the evidence to be made public." York added that doing this allowed the readers to enter the "intertextual space in which (Vice) has worked" and that what Vice was doing with his story was allusion, not plagiarism. York also stated that, according to his own analysis of Vice's story and Carmer's source material, Vice did not break copyright law. York's view was proven correct when Vice's collection was republished two years later. York also wrote one of the introductions to this new edition of The Bear Bryant Funeral Train. York's poetry appeared in numerous journals and magazines, including The New Orleans Review, The Oxford American, Poetry Daily, Quarterly West, and The Southern Review. His first book of poems, Murder Ballads, won the 2005 Elixir Prize in Poetry. His sophomore book, A Murmuration of Starlings, won the 2008 Colorado Book Award in Poetry and was published through the Crab Orchard Series in Poetry.His third book, Persons Unknown, was published in 2010 as an editor's selection in the Crab Orchard Series in Poetry by Southern Illinois University Press. Both books chronicled and eulogized the martyrs of the Civil Rights movement. Pulitzer-Prize winning author Natasha Trethewey described A Murmuration of Starlings as "a fierce, beautiful, necessary book. Fearless in their reckoning, these poems resurrect contested histories and show us that the past—with its troubled beauty, its erasures, and its violence—weighs upon us all . . . a murmuration so that we don't forget, so that no one disappears into history." In 2009, York was the University of Mississippi's Summer Poet in Residence. On February 14, 2010, York was awarded the Third Coast Poetry Prize. He was also a recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts Creative Writing Fellowship in poetry. His fourth book, Abide, was published in 2014. That same year he was also named a posthumous recipient of the Witter Bynner Fellowship by the U.S. Poet Laureate. York died on December 16, 2012, from a stroke. York completed a new poetry manuscript, titled Abide, shortly before his death. The book was published by Southern Illinois University Press.)

The Best Poem Of Jake Adam York

Abide

Forgive me if I forget
with the birdsong and the day's
last glow folding into the hands
of the trees, forgive me the few
syllables of the autumn crickets,
the year's last firefly winking
like a penny in the shoulder's weeds,
if I forget the hour, if I forget
the day as the evening star
pours out its whiskey over the gravel
and asphalt I've walked
for years alone, if I startle
when you put your hand in mine,
if I wonder how long your light
has taken to reach me here.

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