Jericho Brown, poet
On this episode of F***ing Shakespeare, our guest is the one and only Jericho Brown. Poets, lovers, and one who desires to hear beautiful language spoken by a beautiful voice, this episode is for you. We talk about Brown’s duplex, a poetic form he created for his new book “The Tradition,” his passion for his work and how he also doesn’t drive a Bentley. I’m not going to ruin the surprise or anything, but Jericho sings. That’s all I’m gonna say; just listen.
Brown’s writing can be found here:
His latest collection, The Tradition, from Copper Canyon
While you’re reading his work, check out his other collections, The New Testament and Please
His work also appears in issue 6 of The Bennington Review, the NYT, no. 226 of The Paris Review
If you cannot get enough of his reading voice, here he is reading more poems:
“The Card Tables” and “Trojan” for the Poetry Foundation.
And “Night Shift” and “Colosseum” on The New Yorker.
Honorable mentions:
Jericho discovered Laura “Ralphi” Burgess’s work and used it for the gorgeous cover for The Tradition.
Shout out to Jericho’s fantastic colleagues at Emory: T Cooper, Hank Klinbanoff, Joseph Skibell, Tayari Jones, Tiphanie Yanique, Robyn Schiff, and Heather Christle.
Visit Jericho’s website for more about him and/or follow him on Twitter to for your daily Jericho Brown dosage.