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Grief Slut
Barnes and Noble
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Grief Slut in Chattanooga, TN
Current price: $16.00

Barnes and Noble
Grief Slut in Chattanooga, TN
Current price: $16.00
Loading Inventory...
Size: OS
Evelyn Berry's debut poetry collection,
Grief Slut,
is an examination of the queer lineage of pleasure, grief, and resilience in the American South.
Berry offers a portrait of a girl living through boyhood and grappling with the violence of nostalgia in poems that blend high art, archival slivers, and Taco Bell. This collection invites us into a landscape home to sloppy kissers, swamp suitors, scrappy "limbwrecked boys," and drag queens drenched in glitter sweat, where "each day is trespass" and queer youth fight to "hear one another breathe just a little while longer."
Grief Slut,
is an examination of the queer lineage of pleasure, grief, and resilience in the American South.
Berry offers a portrait of a girl living through boyhood and grappling with the violence of nostalgia in poems that blend high art, archival slivers, and Taco Bell. This collection invites us into a landscape home to sloppy kissers, swamp suitors, scrappy "limbwrecked boys," and drag queens drenched in glitter sweat, where "each day is trespass" and queer youth fight to "hear one another breathe just a little while longer."
Evelyn Berry's debut poetry collection,
Grief Slut,
is an examination of the queer lineage of pleasure, grief, and resilience in the American South.
Berry offers a portrait of a girl living through boyhood and grappling with the violence of nostalgia in poems that blend high art, archival slivers, and Taco Bell. This collection invites us into a landscape home to sloppy kissers, swamp suitors, scrappy "limbwrecked boys," and drag queens drenched in glitter sweat, where "each day is trespass" and queer youth fight to "hear one another breathe just a little while longer."
Grief Slut,
is an examination of the queer lineage of pleasure, grief, and resilience in the American South.
Berry offers a portrait of a girl living through boyhood and grappling with the violence of nostalgia in poems that blend high art, archival slivers, and Taco Bell. This collection invites us into a landscape home to sloppy kissers, swamp suitors, scrappy "limbwrecked boys," and drag queens drenched in glitter sweat, where "each day is trespass" and queer youth fight to "hear one another breathe just a little while longer."

















