“This collection is a profound and melodic song that explores the complexities of being a queer, diasporic Black Pacific Islander woman. Throughout, Williams composes formally innovative poems that praise her multiple languages, lineages, and belongings.”—Craig Santos Perez, author of Navigating CHamoru Poetry
“Danielle P. Williams confesses that she wants to be ‘in two languages / at once,’ and she excellently does this while also creating a third language: one of Black Indigenous intimacy that asks other Black Indigenous kin to ‘tell the world about yourself.’ By merging spoken word with formalist traditions and Black gospel with Chamorro stories, Williams teaches us to make song and politics out of fury, experience, and ancestral dreams. Chamorrita Song is a debut in avant-garde and spoken poetics.”—Alan Pelaez Lopez, editor of When Language Broke Open: An Anthology of Queer and Trans Black Writers of Latin American Descent— -