Ama Codjoe is the author of Bluest Nude. She is also the author of Blood of the Air, winner of the Drinking Gourd Chapbook Poetry Prize. Her honors include a 2017 Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers’ Award, a Creative Writing Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts, a NYSCA/NYFA Artist Fellowship, and a Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship. Codjoe’s work has twice appeared in The Best American Poetry. She lives in New York City.
Praise for Bluest Nude Fiercely intelligent and both emotionally and formally rich. -Library Journal The hotly burning poems in Codjoe's debut collection collapse themes of color and body into a lyrical supernova. -Booklist, starred review Bluest Nude is a heady mix of ekphrastic and archival poems...Codjoe conjures the unmistakable textures of Black Americana. -Layla Benitez-James, Poetry Foundation How beautifully seen, tended, and rendered are our many Black lives under this poet's exquisite gaze. In appetite and loss, rage and praise, what animates these poems is a profound cherishing, an abiding (and yet at every turn surprising) love rushing out from the lush wilderness of Ama Codjoe's rapturous imagination. Bluest Nude is an ecstatic encounter. -Tracy K. Smith Sensual, sound-driven, and brimming with a necessary truth, the poems in Bluest Nude are pulsating with both grief and beauty. Wrought out of resurrection and reclaiming, these brilliant poems honor the mystery and legacy of the body. Codjoe has written a true triumph of a debut that feels urgent and deeply human. -Ada Limon It is hard to find words for the fineness of Ama Codjoe's poetry, its unabashed and luminous vibrancy. She unframes old myths about beauty and femininity and care to bring them intimately into the experience of the body where she forges far more supple visions. Her language is so rich and resourceful that, as it enlarges lyric possibilities, it also enlarges human ones. Never have I been so convinced that the desire to know oneself and the desire to be the agent of one's own radical self-making can be audacious and brilliant collaborators. -Mary Szybist Codjoe's poems made me ache in the best way. These poems call forward our many mothers-in pictures and pages-they create a vibrant salon pulsing with the confidence of a poet's urgent, material response. Exquisitely balanced between premonition and memory, Bluest Nude is a gathering and conjuring of improvisation and reflection, sensuality and joy, call and response. -Ellen Gallagher Praise for Ama Codjoe Yes, listen. Listen. Ama Codjoe's writing is too eloquent not the hear. -Ed Roberson, from the introduction to Blood of the Air At the heart of Codjoe's poems in her first chapbook, Blood of the Air, is a real heart, pumping, working the blood of life-good blood, bad blood-out. . . . Codjoe's poems, her re-framings, are full of care and kindness for the speakers of the poems, imagined or not, in their reveries, in their vulnerabilities, in their angers. The quieter poems press your hand with such intention when they skip-never a surprise CD skip from an accidental scratch; a practiced boxer's skip. -Adroit Journal Codjoe's poetry offers a brief, powerful intersection where the subjects of her poems illustrate how some issues recur again and again throughout the human experience. In times like these, when blood and air are porous elements that we fear, we see how they are ancient and necessary, too. -Tara Betts Codjoe's extraordinary debut poetry chapbook, Blood of the Air, conveys a sense of urgency, vulnerability, and Codjoe's mastery of the poetic craft. . . . Blood of the Air explores narratives of women and women figures who have lived, lost, resisted, been subject to breaking and other people's definitions, and who have reclaimed their breaths and freedom. -Nadia Alexis