"Talking to the Bones: Slavery in New York City," A Reading with David Mills @ King Manor Museum
Jun
17
"Talking to the Bones: Slavery in New York City," A Reading with David Mills
At our We The People Civics Fair, we are delighted to have poet David Mills present "Talking to the Bones: Slavery in New York City," with selections from his work Boneyarn. This reading will be hosted in our historic Parlor, overlooked by a portrait of Rufus King, founding father and vocal antislavery advocate. This event is free and open to the public! More about Boneyarn: "David Mills' BONEYARN; about New York's African Burial Ground--America's oldest and largest slave cemetery--conducts a heart wrenching yet historically meticulous excavation of America's contradictory allegiance to freedom and slavery; equality and racial hatred. Whether speaking about or through the voices of nameless servants or chimney sweeps; Mills combines a novelist's love of character with a poet's pitch perfect ear for idiom and eye for unforgettable detail. The imagination at work in this remarkable book is humane; unflinching; erudite and utterly moving. In its wide range of styles and voices--its empathy and outrage--BONEYARN is a profoundly American work that enlightens and chastens; laments and affirms or finds in lamentation a complicated form of affirmation. A marvelous achievement." --Alan Shapiro
Date and Time
June 17, 2023 @ 2:00 pm – 3:00 pm America/New York Timezone
Location
King Manor Museum
150-03 Jamaica Ave
Contact
Abigail Waldron
(718) 206-0545



At our We The People Civics Fair, we are delighted to have poet David Mills present “Talking to the Bones: Slavery in New York City,” with selections from his work Boneyarn. This reading will be hosted in our historic Parlor, overlooked by a portrait of Rufus King, founding father and vocal antislavery advocate. This event is free and open to the public!

More about Boneyarn:
“David Mills’ BONEYARN; about New York’s African Burial Ground–America’s oldest and largest slave cemetery–conducts a heart wrenching yet historically meticulous excavation of America’s contradictory allegiance to freedom and slavery; equality and racial hatred. Whether speaking about or through the voices of nameless servants or chimney sweeps; Mills combines a novelist’s love of character with a poet’s pitch perfect ear for idiom and eye for unforgettable detail. The imagination at work in this remarkable book is humane; unflinching; erudite and utterly moving. In its wide range of styles and voices–its empathy and outrage–BONEYARN is a profoundly American work that enlightens and chastens; laments and affirms or finds in lamentation a complicated form of affirmation. A marvelous achievement.” –Alan Shapiro