How to Read: Poems

by Thomas Richardson

Equally full of reverence for familial genealogies and humor in seeing the South as baffling as it is, Thomas Richardson’s poetics are uniquely charming. “How To Read: Poems,” the first poetry title by the new independent publisher Friendly City Books, is a welcome contribution to the historic and ongoing canon of writers and artists in Mississippi. — The Clarion-Ledger

Praise for How to Read:

“In the opening poem of How to Read, the speaker expresses the desire to ‘build a poem from an earthquake.’ Thomas Richardson fulfills that mission with this extraordinary debut collection which is filled with poems that startle, shake and delight. Richardson is a master at wordplay and juxtaposition, combining theodicy and thunderstorms or biology class and first love in ways that are seamless, evocative and illuminating. These poems, as the best poetry always does, show us how to read the in-between spaces of human experience by paying attention. Here is a poet who understands the miraculous beauty and wisdom of everyday life.”—Jacqueline Allen Trimble, American Happiness (New South Press)

Thomas Richardson’s How To Read is a bower of truth nestled within the bewilderments of the South. Where the poet is confronted—‘Tell us about Mississippi; we have to know’—you can expect wit, joy, and deep attention to the South’s past and present. Richardson’s gift for having us reconsider our home and our place within it makes How To Read the ambitious testament Mississippi needs.”—C.T. Salazar, Headless John the Baptist Hitchhiking (Acre Books) and winner of the Mississippi Institute of Arts and Letters 2020 Award for Poetry

How to Read instructs us with passages from the author’s childhood, school days as student and teacher, churchgoing, marriage, and early stages of fatherhood. This Book of Thomas cites chapter and verse on life’s blessings, body blows, and ultimate bemusement. But there’s amusement, too, as we follow our wry guide on his itinerary through Mississippi and other heartlands. Some sons are dutiful, others prodigal. Thomas Richardson successfully blurs the distinction.”—James Fowler, The Pain Trader (Golden Antelope Press)

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About the Author

Thomas Richardson is currently an English instructor at the Mississippi School for Mathematics and Science. Born in Raleigh, N.C., and raised in Columbus, Miss., Richardson earned a bachelor’s degree from Millsaps College, a master’s degree in theological studies from Vanderbilt University, and an M.A. in teaching and an M.F.A. in creative writing from the Mississippi University for Women. He has served as an editor for Ponder Review and Dirty Paws Poetry Review. He lives in Columbus with his wife Hillary and son Emmett. His website is http://www.thomasbrichardson.com.

Art: Alice Pieschel / Photo: Chris Jenkins