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TEETH NEVER SLEEP

University of Arkansas Press, 2018

Winner, CantoMundo Poetry Prize

Winner, American Book Award

Finalist, PEN America Open Book Award

Finalist, Kate Tufts Discovery Award

Drawing on folklore and fantasy, childhood memory and hallucination, and marked by a tone of piercing divulgence, Teeth Never Sleep nimbly negotiates the split consciousness a culture of dominance requires of men, especially men of color, highlighting the fissures in selfhood created by the pressure to seek submission over intimacy while still wanting desperately to be loved, and tracing the contorted route by which emotional pain finds expression in violence. “The night my girlfriend tells my mother I beat her, /I feel betrayed. This was a secret we kept between us. /That night, I was no longer my mother’s loving son,” the speaker in one poem confesses, and later “I never wanted to be this kind of animal.”

 

​And yet, through the lens of Ángel García’s sharp imagining, men frequently appear as beasts (sometimes literally)—as hybrid beings both tender and brutal—that he steadfastly refuses to let off the hook as he obsessively catalogs the origins of toxic masculinity (the first time I made my mother cry, the first time I pitied my father, the first time I saw a girl bleed) and its quiet, lasting effects: “Still a part of me believes a / man shouldn’t cry in front of a woman, even in the dark.”

 

In a culture of weaponized masculinity, the poems in Teeth Never Sleep make a doorway of a wound, inviting readers to walk through and sit down inside the raw pain they contain to meditate on two central, urgent questions: what it means to be a man and how, as a man, to love.

“How could there be tenderness, pleasure and myth, resurrection, and even fur inside rivers—in brutality? This is the book that stands alone in its midnight boldness, its veined shadow secrets. One of the most difficult arts of the poem is to descend into its lightless under-realms, into what lies beneath the elegant surfaces—here García examines our gendered, warring bodies, man, son, lover, husband, father, mother, ghost woman—our stripped down self unmasked, our garbled, foamed and delirious, lonesome acts—our ‘animalia.’ Open this book if you dare. But it is not the animal smashed suddenly, torn away from its innocent gait (that García animates in various forms) that he is redeeming. In his hands, these pages, notice how Ángel García still cups an abandoned child-shaped flame, a night nation perhaps, breathes into it, regardless of its alarming fangs. This is a raw, unsutured, incredible collection. One of a kind—a nose-breaking, heart devouring, blazing volume.”

Juan Felipe Herrera, Poet Laureate of the United States, 2015–2017

Reviews

Diego Báez

"García lays bare the routines of abuse that often repeat themselves over generations: a father walks out on his family..."

J. Bailey Hutchinson

"Through the ruptured torsos of animals, the bleeding mouths of speakers, and the chewed-up throats of lovers, García’s poems struggle with gender and intimacy."

Emily Pérez

"While the poems point to reasons beasts grow inside men—cultural and familial inheritances of silence and violence—only the alter ego of the collection, El Esposo de La Llorona—La Llorona’s husband—seems to seek forgiveness. As the collection progresses, he owns his responsibility but is never absolved."

Katie Schmid

"And for all its darkness—and it’s a thorny, brittle, aching book, a wound of a book—the book’s primary project remains the excavation of tenderness."

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