Fugitive Tilts: Essays

Ishion Hutchinson
Farrar, Straus and Giroux

In Fugitive Tilts, the poet Ishion Hutchinson turns to prose to create an incomplete biography of love: love of poetry, discovered in childhood; love of home, with its continual disconnections and returns; and love of the works and artists—from Treasure Island, to John Coltrane, to the Jamaican music of his youth—that look over him with an angel’s aura.

Drawing inspiration from Derek Walcott’s notion that “the sea is history,” Fugitive Tilts is suffused with the sea, present whether Hutchinson is recalling a trip to Senegal or memorializing his grandmother in a meditation on a painting by Édouard Vuillard.

With this fresh, archipelagic sensibility Hutchinson confronts the fraught questions of inheritances and influences, “acknowledging,” in his words, “something outside our view.” These essays, varied in their forms and ranging across time and place, allow Hutchinson to build a space from which the suffering of the past and the present can be reckoned with and survived.

Read more at Farrar, Straus and Giroux

Buy from Bookshop.org

Previous
Previous

Dissenting Forces: A History of Abolition and Black Thought in Higher Learning

Next
Next

The Souths in Her: Black Women Writers and Choreographers and the Poetics of Transmutation