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About
Ancestral Rage
by Nia Garrett
Some books are written from memory.
Ancestral Rage is written from blood.
In this powerful collection of poetry, testimony, spiritual reflection, and literary ceremony, Nia Garrett opens the vault of inheritance and asks what happens when a daughter finally names what generations of women were forced to swallow. This is not simply a book about anger. It is a book about what anger becomes when it is witnessed, mourned, sanctified, and transformed. Rage becomes archive, altar, and the language grief learns when silence is no longer enough.
Rooted in Afro-Caribbean mysticism, Black feminist truth-telling, Latinidad, Indigenous memory, womanist theology, and ancestral resistance, Ancestral Rage moves through the wounds and wonders of womanhood with a voice that is both machete and prayer. Garrett writes into the intersections of colonization, motherhood, faith, sexuality, migration, displacement, and generational trauma. Each poem becomes a ritual for women who were never allowed to be fully soft, fully safe, or fully free.
The collection begins in blood memory, where colonization is not distant history but an unfinished war still living in language, land, bodies, institutions, and family systems. Garrett confronts empire directly, naming the theft, erasure, and forced obedience that shaped diasporic survival. Her poems refuse respectability, silence, and the expectation that oppressed people make their pain comfortable for others.
Yet Ancestral Rage is not only an indictment. It is also a resurrection.
Through poems such as La Resistencia, Ancestral Rage, Nia's Trees, Crowned in Hoops, No Sabo, Still Sacred, When I Broke Up With God, Resistance Is Not Terrorism, and The Women, Garrett transforms personal and collective grief into sacred confrontation. She writes for the Afro-Latina daughter caught between languages, the Black girl whose brilliance was questioned, the mother who learned survival before tenderness, the eldest daughter burdened too soon, and the woman who finally decides her body is not a battlefield for other people's expectations.
At its heart, the collection explores the transformation of rage into recognition. Garrett names rage not as madness but as grief with nowhere to go. She examines the inherited labor of daughters, the exhaustion of women who carried families through sacrifice, and the rebellion of those who chose themselves before their spirits disappeared. In doing so, she creates a literary altar for the women who carried wounds, prayers, secrets, and unfinished dreams across generations.
The final movement turns toward ritual and release. Through the Nine Nights sequence, mourning becomes movement, fire becomes cleansing, and silence becomes song. The dead are invited to rest because the living have finally remembered. The journey does not end in rage. It ends in ancestral healing-in the understanding that while the wound may be inherited, so is the medicine.
Ancestral Rage is for the daughters who were told to be strong before they were allowed to be soft. It is for women who have mistaken survival for identity and for readers who understand that grief can become holy, joy can become political, and truth can become liberation.
This is poetry as ceremony.
This is testimony as fire.
This is a daughter calling the ancestors by name.
This is Nia Garrett refusing to let silence be the family inheritance.
Light the candle.
Pour the rum.
Tell the truth.
The ancestors are listening.
by Nia Garrett
Some books are written from memory.
Ancestral Rage is written from blood.
In this powerful collection of poetry, testimony, spiritual reflection, and literary ceremony, Nia Garrett opens the vault of inheritance and asks what happens when a daughter finally names what generations of women were forced to swallow. This is not simply a book about anger. It is a book about what anger becomes when it is witnessed, mourned, sanctified, and transformed. Rage becomes archive, altar, and the language grief learns when silence is no longer enough.
Rooted in Afro-Caribbean mysticism, Black feminist truth-telling, Latinidad, Indigenous memory, womanist theology, and ancestral resistance, Ancestral Rage moves through the wounds and wonders of womanhood with a voice that is both machete and prayer. Garrett writes into the intersections of colonization, motherhood, faith, sexuality, migration, displacement, and generational trauma. Each poem becomes a ritual for women who were never allowed to be fully soft, fully safe, or fully free.
The collection begins in blood memory, where colonization is not distant history but an unfinished war still living in language, land, bodies, institutions, and family systems. Garrett confronts empire directly, naming the theft, erasure, and forced obedience that shaped diasporic survival. Her poems refuse respectability, silence, and the expectation that oppressed people make their pain comfortable for others.
Yet Ancestral Rage is not only an indictment. It is also a resurrection.
Through poems such as La Resistencia, Ancestral Rage, Nia's Trees, Crowned in Hoops, No Sabo, Still Sacred, When I Broke Up With God, Resistance Is Not Terrorism, and The Women, Garrett transforms personal and collective grief into sacred confrontation. She writes for the Afro-Latina daughter caught between languages, the Black girl whose brilliance was questioned, the mother who learned survival before tenderness, the eldest daughter burdened too soon, and the woman who finally decides her body is not a battlefield for other people's expectations.
At its heart, the collection explores the transformation of rage into recognition. Garrett names rage not as madness but as grief with nowhere to go. She examines the inherited labor of daughters, the exhaustion of women who carried families through sacrifice, and the rebellion of those who chose themselves before their spirits disappeared. In doing so, she creates a literary altar for the women who carried wounds, prayers, secrets, and unfinished dreams across generations.
The final movement turns toward ritual and release. Through the Nine Nights sequence, mourning becomes movement, fire becomes cleansing, and silence becomes song. The dead are invited to rest because the living have finally remembered. The journey does not end in rage. It ends in ancestral healing-in the understanding that while the wound may be inherited, so is the medicine.
Ancestral Rage is for the daughters who were told to be strong before they were allowed to be soft. It is for women who have mistaken survival for identity and for readers who understand that grief can become holy, joy can become political, and truth can become liberation.
This is poetry as ceremony.
This is testimony as fire.
This is a daughter calling the ancestors by name.
This is Nia Garrett refusing to let silence be the family inheritance.
Light the candle.
Pour the rum.
Tell the truth.
The ancestors are listening.