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Urbanshee

By Siaara Freeman

In this bold debut, Siaara Freeman reimagines the banshee of Irish lore—a fierce feminine spirit who attends the death of a loved one—as an urban legend, focusing on the death of the speaker’s drug-dealing father, who was killed by gunfire at point-blank. Much of the book examines the wound of that loss, digging through memory like a snagged fingernail anxious for “raw skin with an itch you have / to feel to believe.” In “X Things They Never Tell You About the Drug Dealer’s Daughter,” the speaker channels a child’s misplaced enthusiasm:

                                              My daddy can cook, y’all,
we got enough baking soda in my basement to open up
ten bakeries! The cakes they sell so fast I never see
them—just the customers at the screen door lookin’
some kind of hungry

A series of poems riff on “haint blue,” a shade of paint traditionally used on porch ceilings in Georgia and South Carolina to ward off evil spirits. Used widely by Gullah peoples, the paint is derived from indigo, a cash crop that was central to the transatlantic slave trade. Freeman invokes this complicated history as she meditates on the legacies we inherit:

I am the third girl of a third girl of a third girl of old blood in a new body. I am a Freeman. I am love & craft & country. I got some steady eyes in the back of my hope. Some spells
just take centuries & so much blood to complete. 

The poem “Haint Green” begins: “A funny thing happened at my father’s funeral. His friend owed him money & he put it in the coffin with him.” And in “Haint Glitter” the speaker asks: “Do you know how / hard it is for a ghost to protect a girl?”

It’s like grasping glitter with an invisible pair
of tweezers. The ghost, the father, he is neither
here nor there & the girl, she is both. 

In this balance between life and death, between myth and urban lit, Freeman’s lyrics cry out, wail, keen, and reward. 

Reviewed By Diego Báez
Publisher Button Poetry
Pages 168
Date December 6, 2022
Price $18.00