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Friday, June 29, 2018

"Untitled" by Jesús Castillo

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June 29, 2018
 

Untitled

 
Jesús Castillo
Jesús Castillo reads "Untitled."

About This Poem

 

"I liked the question Fady Joudah posed in his note about 'Things You've Never Seen,' recently featured in Poem-a-Day: 'when is a poem more than the sum of our progressive, imperial selves?' It made me think: can we get rid of socialization's influence in us, or enough of it to allow us to determine the flavor of our own lives? My friend Omar Pérez said the job of the poet today is to have fun and to observe, and to have fun with what he observes, which I thought was great. Another friend, the Serbian philosopher Obrad Savić, once told me the highest task of poetry is myth. I agree. I imagine the task includes destruction as much as creation."
—Jesús Castillo

 

Jesús Castillo was born in Ciudad Valles in the state of San Luis Potosí, Mexico, and moved to California with his family at age eleven. He is the author of Remains (McSweeney's, 2016), and he has an MFA in poetry from the University of Iowa. He lives in Oaxaca, Mexico.

 

Photo credit: Megan Touhey

Poetry by Castillo

 

Remains

(McSweeney's, 2016)

"Things You've Never Seen" by Fady Joudah

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"Is It True All Legends Once Were Rumors" by Carl Phillips

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"In Our Late Empire, Love" by Malachi Black

read-more

June Guest Editor: D. A. Powell

 

Thanks to D. A. Powell, author of Repast: Tea, Lunch, and Cocktails (Graywolf Press, 2014), who curated Poem-a-Day this month. Read more about Powell and our guest editors for the year.

Help Support Poem-a-Day

 

If you value Poem-a-Day, please consider a monthly donation or one-time gift to help make it possible. Poem-a-Day is the only digital series publishing new, previously unpublished work by today's poets each weekday morning. The free series, which also features a curated selection of classic poems on weekends, reaches 450,000+ readers daily. Thank you!

 
 

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