From the Pulitzer Prize-winning poet: a stunning meditation on memory, family and history that explores how we in America might--together--come to a new view of our shared past. "A vulnerable, honest look at a life lived in a country still struggling with its evils...Hopeful...Beautiful and haunting."--Eddie S. Glaude Jr., author of Begin Again: James Baldwin's America and Its Urgent Lessons for Our OwnIn 2020, heartsick from constant assaults on Black life, Tracy K. Smith found herself soul- searching, and digging into the historical archive for help navigating the "din of human division and strife." With lyricism and urgency, Smith draws on several avenues of thinking--personal, documentary, and spiritual--to understand who we are as a nation and what we might hope to mean to one another.
To Free the Captives begins this journey by assembling a new terminology of American life. Parsing the difference between the
Free and the
Freed, and the distance between
Time Ago and
Soon, Smith etches a portrait of where we find ourselves four hundred years into the American experiment, and offers a compelling argument for the vocabulary of the soul as a tool for fulfilling our duties to each other and to the future.