Diamond Forde, "The Book of Alice" (Scribner, 2026)

Summary

Winner of the 2025 James Laughlin Award from The Academy of American Poets 

When her grandmother died, poet Diamond Forde inherited a well-worn family Bible to remember her by. In The Book of Alice (Scribner, 2026), she retells the story of her grandmother’s life through the framework of the only poetry Alice knew: the King James Bible. A Black woman born in the Jim Crow South, Alice joined the tide of the Great Migration when she made her exodus to New York City. She married, divorced, and raised eight children, all while struggling to define herself in an America that looks frighteningly like our own. Using found forms like recipes, a family tree, and a US Census Report alongside imagined psalms and scriptures, Diamond draws bold parallels between biblical narratives and the lived experiences of those often relegated to the margins of history. The result is both a heartfelt elegy and a new sacred text.

Find Diamond at her website and on Instagram.

And find host, Sullivan Summer, at her website, on Instagram, and over on Substack, where she and Diamond continued their conversation.

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Sullivan Summer

Sullivan Summer is an independent scholar with expertise in American History, Literature, and Criticism, with focus on the Black experience.
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