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For your reading list Credit: Arianna Rebolini From 2015 to 2017, Juan Felipe Herrera was the United States Poet Laureate — the first Latino to be appointed — and throughout those two years, while traveling the country and reflecting upon the experience shortly after, he wrote about the lives and struggles of Latin American immigrants he encountered. Those poems became Every Day We Get More Illegal, which reads as both a condemnation of America's sins, and a plea for it to recognize them. But though Herrera — the son of migrant farmers — is writing as a witness, he is also speaking to and about these communities with the tenderness of someone who lives among them.
One of the book's most striking poems is "You Just Don't Talk About It," a powerful, emotional, and breathtaking — I mean that literally, as in the momentum of the two-page unpunctuated verse had me gasping at its end — litany of America's abuses against immigrants; and a relentless attack on its ability to dismiss the trauma it inflicts on marginalized people, while benefiting from their labor. Herrera grabs your face and won't let you look away: "you don't care about the trans teens the taste of acid the taste of plutonium about the nugget of larva of decay in our milk and juice and you don't care about the pesticide skin of uncle Timoteo hauling Mendota cotton and melons on the hammer lane of 99," he writes. It's a perfect encapsulation of much of the collection, which is furious, evocative, and urgent, until, with a sort of quiet peace, Herrera opens the book up to his hope for a better, kinder future, and graciously invites the reader into his vision of it. Get your copy. — Arianna Rebolini
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