#PoFest 2024 Headliners: PSNY's Poetry Picks

The biggest event in our calendar year (and yours too, if you know what’s good for you) is coming up this July 13th & 14th on Governor’s Island in NYC.

In case you’ve been living under an excitement-obstructing rock, the event I’m referring to is…
THE 13TH ANNUAL
NEW YORK CITY POETRY FESTIVAL
.

Every day of the festival, between 3-4pm on the main stage, our incredible headliners will be performing. For a sneak peek into the poetry of Safia Elhillo, Ilya Kaminsky, Kazim Ali & Katie Farris see our PSNY Picks from their outstanding catalogues below.

spring

After Louise Glück

it’s late now, it’s early, no way

to know which season it is

of the total years of my life,

weren’t we only just nineteen,

tonya & i, wasn’t she only just

alive, long-limbed & cross-legged

on my dorm room floor,

wasn’t it springtime of a year

so unlike this one, thirteen

years past, cool nights in line

outside the nuyorican hoping

to make it on the list, wasn’t it

a friday night like this one

& the only people i wanted to love

were poets, earrings swaying

against their necks, dancing

in the dark of the room where we

all knew each other’s secrets, weren’t

we all just at that party, wasn’t i only

just eighteen, pointed northward

on a chinatown bus to that city,

to watch ai elo onstage at the apollo,

wasn’t she only just alive, smoking

with camonghne, asking me my favorite

song, cackling on the apartment floor,

on the air mattress we used as a couch,

how is it that it was long ago, how is it

i am on the other side of it, long ago, how

did i leave that city, that time when we

were all together, everyone alive,

wasn’t the dream to be a poet, wasn’t

the plan to live forever, our powers

newly acquired, newly in love

with what we could do, didn’t we all

belong to each other, to that work,

going after to the pizza shop

to recite what we’d memorized,

weren’t we all just there, wasn’t it warm

outside, wasn’t the road long & clear,

isn’t it early still, isn’t it late, & why

am i still here, did i survive or was i left

behind, & what season is it that we are

no longer together & some of us have gone?

Bonus poem: Click here to read Ode to Sudanese Americans

Lullaby

Little daughter
rainwater

snow and branches protect you
whitewashed walls

and neighbors’ hands all
Child of my Aprils

little earth of
six pounds

my white hair
keeps your sleep lit

Bonus poem: Click here to read We Lived Happily During the War

Ramadan

You wanted to be so hungry, you would break into branches,
and have to choose between the starving month’s

nineteenth, twenty-first, and twenty-third evenings.
The liturgy begins to echo itself and why does it matter?

If the ground-water is too scarce one can stretch nets
into the air and harvest the fog.

Hunger opens you to illiteracy,
thirst makes clear the starving pattern,

the thick night is so quiet, the spinning spider pauses,
the angel stops whispering for a moment—

The secret night could already be over,
you will have to listen very carefully—

You are never going to know which night’s mouth is sacredly reciting
and which night’s recitation is secretly mere wind—

Bonus poem: Click here to read Autobiography

Why Write Poetry in a Burning World

To train myself to find, in the midst of hell
what isn’t hell.

The body, bald, cancerous, but still
beautiful enough to
imagine living the body
washing the body
replacing a loose front
porch step the body chewing
what it takes to keep a body
going –

This scene has a tune
a language I can read a door
I cannot close I stand
within its wedge
a shield.

Why write love poetry in a burning world?
To train myself, in the midst of a burning world
to offer poems of love to a burning world.

Bonus Poem: Click here to read After the Mastectomy