Waning

Nué Foster
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Waning

Nué Foster
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Found in: Arts & Letters, General Poetry

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Overview

28 PAGESENGLISH

Promotional Details
  • Published date: May 13, 2022
  • Language: English
  • No. of Pages: 28
  • Publisher: Haymarket Books
  • ISBN: 9781642598506
  • Dimensions: 5.5" W x 1.0" L x 8.5" H

Nué is a Blk queer artist from the far south side of Chicago where they call The Hundreds home. Chicago’s 2020 Youth Poet Laureate, they’re work has been featured at The Aids Foundation Chicago, BBC Radio, and Nike among others. They’ve performed their poetry at Pitchfork’s Music Festival, Windy City Live, Newberry Library, Driehaus museum, Wndr Museum, and Young Chicago Authors’ Louder Than A Bomb poetry festival in which they won in 2020 as an individual.

Waning is an ode to interior space. Invoking the moon as a symbol for our own emotional phases and cycles, these poems invite us to look unflinchingly at our most shadowy parts and find them worthy of love. Nué writes, "I am trying to become friends with loneliness" -- a courageous act in the face of a society that values productivity over the ability to cultivate a deep love and knowledge of ourselves.”
—Jamila Woods, singer, poet


“Nue Foster’s Waning is a tender reminder. Children of the sun, and faces of the moon, we are an earthly body. Growing and moving in truth, identity and passion. Who’s to judge how we got here? When we depend on the sky to know where we come from.”
—E’mon Lauren Black, author of
Commando, Chicago’s First Youth Poet Laureate 


“I was in my late thirties before I had the luxury of knowing what taking up space was all about. However, this human has shown us that all things including the moon have multiple dimensions and just like the moon, we are changing whether we want to or not. And we are all asking to be seen.
—Fredia Gee

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