Welcome to the website of Martin Jude Farawell—an award-winning poet, playwright, performer and poetry festival director. Martin’s first full-length collection of poetry, Odd Boy, was published in October 2019 by Sibling Rivalry Press. (Odd Boy is also available through Amazon and Barnes & Noble.) Odd Boy was recently named a finalist for the 2020 Paterson Poetry Prize; view Martin’s virtual reading with the other finalists and winners, including Jericho Brown, winner of the 2020 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry.
PRAISE FOR ODD BOY
“There is a burnished clarity gleaming in the poems of Martin Jude Farawell, born of urgency and honesty, tenderness and rage, suffering and transcendence—poems from the marrow of life and death itself. In vivid, even visceral language, the poet evokes the breath of an alcoholic father, the din of voices warring just outside the door, the failure of a ‘lapsed Catholic’ to suppress the giggles at a funeral, the statues of saints helpless at the deathbed, the strange terrors of carousel horses at the pier. ‘If I sing joy, even sing joy, I weep,’ declares Farawell, and yet there is song, even joy, as he transforms the history of violence into art, refusing to pass that violence along to the next generation, defiantly rejecting Abraham and Isaac for the call of the birds and the sea. We need this deeply human, and humane, song. Keep singing.”
—Martín Espada, 2021 National Book Award winner for his poetry collection Floaters
“Martin Jude Farawell’s Odd Boy summons us to the very heart of beauty with an irrepressible voice: ‘I was walking / my awkward, unbalanced act / between boy and man…’ These poems travel far inward to the land of suffering and the road out, with such lovely, ecstatic lines that collide with the courage of saying things clearly. We are fortunate witnesses to a life fully human, a speaker of great depth who has chosen to sing now: ‘To spend your song / singing your way there, / is to be less / of a singing thing / here.’ A remarkable book.”
—Jan Beatty, author of the poetry collection Body Wars and the memoir American Bastard, which won the 2019 Red Hen Nonfiction Award
“Whether they dramatize scenes from a Catholic boyhood of smirking resistance to orthodoxy or the paralyzing fears of bodyhood in a violent family, Martin Jude Farawell’s poems in Odd Boy introduce us to a titular hero whose purpose in living is simply to survive and grow past despair into an open and affirmative manhood. It’s an earnest quest enacted in richly textured, alertly observed poems that hymn the liminal places of body, nature, and myth where hope might happen, where the self is lured toward risk and vulnerability, those necessary preludes to love. We have here an eloquent singer of both joy and terror—those complex, linked promises that are the meaning of our mortal world. Welcome a beautiful singer of that world, which is his world and which, through these wondrous poems, also becomes ours.”
—Gregory Orr, author of more than 10 collections of poetry, including Selected Books of the Beloved
“When a book is a work of love… very often the key to the text is in/on the cover. So for Martin Jude Farawell’s Odd Boy. Look at the child portrayed on the front. Now at the man cameo-ed in the back. This outstanding poetry collection is the ‘unbalanced act’ through which figure A first survives, then becomes figure B. Odd Boy refutes the inexorability of cause and consequence—it entails the paradox of giving what one never received…”