"(What book should everybody read before the age of 21?) “The Poet X,” by Elizabeth Acevedo. It’s a stunning story told in verse about a young Dominican poet learning to use her voice and take up space. I think as we grow up and start to discover who we are, we also have to discover what we want to say. Then we have to get comfortable saying it. I think this is the kind of story that makes you feel strong when you’re reading it, and then you can lean on that strength when you need to use your voice and take up space in your real life."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Tomi Adeyemi Interview (2019)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Elizabeth_Acevedo
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Elizabeth Acevedo
28 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Elizabeth Acevedo →
Related Quotes
"I think I have a sense of how things need to sound, how to pull an audience in with tone, timing, and pacing. That af…"
"I try to tell the most authentic stories I can about womanhood and Dominican-ness and Afro-Dominican-ness/Afro-Latini…"
"Part of it is finding your readers. Sometimes your readers don’t look like you, or come from your same background, bu…"
"people read like they eat: Sometimes we want comfort, sometimes we want to work to crack something open…Books truly a…"
"(How do you distinguish Y.A. books from adult fiction?) Partly voice, but my own personal ethos is that Y.A. requires…"
"I don’t think writer’s block is real either…but I do think of it as a response to anxiety that oftentimes when we thi…"
"In a way, writing has always been lonely, that’s not really a new thing due to the pandemic per se, but it’s nice tha…"
"I feel like each book requires a different level of research. “The Poet X” was the most closely aligned with my own u…"
"I didn’t personally have anyone in my family who passed on that crash, but I remember how it ruptured our understandi…"
"I often wish I was asked more about the craft of the verse. I spent so many agonizing hours ensuring every line break…"