808s on Halsted: Poems from Englewood is a debut poetry collection that moves through South Side Chicago the way music moves through brick walls - before you hear it, you feel it.
In six chapters, the collection traces a life shaped by sound: grandmother's choir robe pressed on Tuesday nights, JBL speakers carried up two flights like something sacred, the bass from a passing car that opened something in a seven-year-old chest that never closed back up. From the gospel of Anita Baker on Saturday mornings to the drill era that sent Chicago's grief around the world, these forty-eight poems refuse to separate joy from sorrow, faith from violence, or the personal from the political.
This is not an elegy for Englewood. It is a signal - sent out with the faith that whoever needs it will receive it.
Chapters include:
"The music was always there. We just had to learn, again, how to listen."