Dimitri Reyes' first collection, Papi Pichón, is an Ars Poetica response to the Caribbean paradox where using words as categorically simple as "Puerto Ri...
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Last updated on 12 Mar, 2026
ISBN-13:
9798218191436
Publisher
Get Fresh Books Publishing, a Nonprofit Corp
Dimensions
9.00 X 6.00 X 0.24 inches
Language
English
Dimitri Reyes' first collection, Papi Pichón, is an Ars Poetica response to the Caribbean paradox where using words as categorically simple as "Puerto Rican" in an attempt to identify the complex amalgamations of African, Indigenous, Spanish, and beyond can only be described fully through myth. Where the cultural concepts that transcend history and lineage themselves become mythology. The Papi Pichón (Father Pigeon) figure works as an omnipresent voice throughout the collection, taking space during events such as the formation of hurricanes, the 1974 Puerto Rican riots in Newark, NJ, and when climate change has rid the world of us. Through verse lush with the sounds of drums, chants, and pop culture references, Reyes' work also connects these worldly ideas with the more personal spaces that see the poems dealing with the fear of not belonging as well as the reconciling of the death of loved ones, and connecting to ourselves on a spiritual level. Like the dove from where the title gets its name, Papi Pichón flies across oceans and recycles itself through tradition, blood, nature, and time- always manifesting itself in new creationism. Whether pigeon, child, abolitionist, artist, ghost, or thought, in one word, Papi Pichón is spirit. The guide that brings us all closer together.
ISBN-13
:9798218191436
Publisher
:Get Fresh Books Publishing, a Nonprofit Corp
Publication date
: 15 Jul, 2023
Category
: Poetry
Sub-Category
Format
:PAPERBACK
Language
:English
Reading Level
: All
No. of Units
:1
Dimension
: 9.00 X 6.00 X 0.24 inches
Weight
:159 g
In Papi Pichón, a son imagines his father as a bird whose wings span the barrios of Newark and New York City and the mountains of Puerto Rico. This book is a love song to the beauty and creativity of survival across geographies and generations. When Dimitri Reyes writes of "bodies connected through a common wind," we hear the trade winds but also the ravages of Hurricane María, as well the "the language of the trombone" in a salsa key that bridges the bomba drum and the hip-hop beat. In the spirit of the legendary Pedro Pietri, Reyes writes searingly about the ravages of empire ("the pain of my flag") and the death and displacement of a people under (crypto-)colonialism, but with a sense of humor and humanity that allows us to imagine the "last whispers" of our dead and our debt and to find our sovereign swing. This book bleeds with the Boricua histories tattooed on its diasporic heart: from baseball and boxing to factory work and dancing, and from Walter Mercado and the Young Lords to the preparation of Puerto Rican beans (the unforgettably titled "Habichuelology"). Enter this "tinderbox of bodies" and you will find flowing lines, rhythmic prose, and an exploration of the possibilities of poetry as "the artform of nourishment." Watch this fly poet fly!
--Urayoán Noel, author of Transversal (or) Urayoán Noel, New York University
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