Cape Verdean Blues: Book by Shauna Barbosa, Pitt Poetry Series

The speaker in Cape Verdean Blues is an oracle walking down the street. Shauna Barbosa interrogates encounters and the weight of their space. Grounded in bodily experience and the phenomenology of femininity, this collection offers a nuanced understanding of Cape Verdean identity. It uniquely captures the essence of “Sodade,” which refers to the Cape Verdean American experience, as well as the nostalgia and self-reflection one navigates through relationships lived, lost, and imagined. And its layers of unusual imagery and sound hold the reader in their grip.
Information:
“Cape Verdean Blues”
Author: Shauna Barbosa
Publisher: University of Pittsburgh Press
Year: 2018
Pages: 96
Available at:
About the Book
“These words feel like experiences. Some are personal, most are enlightening, but all connect. Connect on a higher Level. A spiritual level.”
— Kendrick Lamar, winner of the 2018 Pulitzer Prize for Music
“A poetry collection I truly loved this year was Cape Verdean Blues by Shauna Barbosa. It’s such a generous book. It thrives on its ability to give and give, even through its linguistic flourishes and singularly beautiful tour of references. I found so much rhythmic quality throughout, I found myself thinking of the book like a well-crafted album. I imagine all of my favourite books in this way because they all allow me to envision them in this manner. With bounce, with image, with a single person doing the work of a whole choir.”
— Hanif Abdurraqib, Poet, Essayist, and Cultural Critic
“In her strong debut, Barbosa delves into how the nuances of identity are formed through intersecting struggles. She characterises identity as mutable, flexible, and a means to keep the memories that shape a person. Writing of her Cape Verdean upbringing in Boston, Barbosa investigates what it means to be a woman of colour and a cultural other: “While I study, my aunt makes a few bucks with no English at the Au Bon Pain in Harvard Square. She’s sweeping like it’s a Saturday morning in her Cape Verdean home.” In Barbosa’s poems, the act of remembering can spur both self-reflection and a political epiphany. In “An Email Recovered from Trash,” Barbosa contends with dating as a black woman: “Can you tell from my name, I’m still in search of a place to stay?” It seems that even when Barbosa wants to forget about otherness momentarily, the outside world serves as a constant reminder. Yet she finds an inner peace, writing ‘My noise so liberating/ it asks to be no one.’ For Barbosa, the memories that are a minefield can also become a haven; those aspects of identity that arise through conflict can serve as a source of exceptional strength.”
— Publishers Weekly
“In Cape Verdean Blues, Shauna Barbosa’s voice is oracular and shapeshifting. Candid as a family friend, but with a fortuneteller’s gravity, the poems in this debut are full of lyric innovations that cut through alleyways in the mind to achieve a numinous beauty. There’s nothing weary here. These blues are alive with wit and swagger.”
— Gregory Pardlo, Winner of the 2015 Pulitzer Prize in Poetry for Digest.
“It was tough to pick a top book in 2018, but I’m going to have to go with Kendrick Lamar on this one and say Shauna Barbosa’s poetry collection, Cape Verdean Blues, topped my list. These poems make bodily experiences feel spiritual while also exploring the concerns of someone whose identity lives between two cultures. I’ve always been a fan of reflecting on those moments or people in life that come and go quickly but leave behind detailed traces of emotion. Barbosa extracts these delicate traces and places them within her words. The collection does what poetry is meant to do, move you.”
— Melissa Ximena Golebiowski, Lit Hub national assigning editor.
“Cape Verdean Blues sings its pleasures and its pains. Delighting in the possibilities of linguistic play and undeniable rhythm, Barbosa’s urgent and intoxicating poems honour the poet’s past even as they fashion and refashion a shifting, irreducibly complex, and irrepressible identity that slyly slips our hold.”
— Kathleen Graber, author of The Eternal City: poems
About the Author
Shauna Barbosa is the author of the poetry collection Cape Verdean Blues (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2018). Her poems have appeared or are forthcoming in The New Yorker, Ploughshares, AGNI, Iowa Review, Virginia Quarterly Review, Boulevard, Poetry Society of America, PBS Newshour, Lit Hub, Lenny Letter, and others. She was nominated for PEN America’s 2019 Open Book Award and was a 2018 Disquiet International Luso-American fellow. Shauna received her MFA from Bennington College in Vermont and has taught Creative Writing in the Writers’ Program at UCLA Extension.

Bibliography / Sources:
- Shauna Barbosa official website: www.shaunabarbosa.com;
- Shauna Barbosa photo © Sydney Brown.