The Coolidge-Wagner Anthology of Recorded Poetry | Ann Arbor District Library

Ann Arbor District Library

The Ann Arbor District Library, Fifth Avenue Studios, and 1473 are proud to present The Coolidge-Wagner Anthology of Recorded Poetry. This series was created to celebrate and document the art of poetry in recorded form. Featuring poets from Ann Arbor, metro Detroit, and beyond, we hope that this series showcases and archives the incredible poetry scene here in Ann Arbor, metro Detroit, and beyond. The Coolidge-Wagner Anthology of Recorded Poetry is named after and dedicated to two of my high school teachers, Judi Coolidge and Tom Wagner (RIP) of Bay High School (Ohio), who encouraged in me, as well as thousands of their other students, a lifelong appreciation and open-minded love of the arts. -Chien-An Yuan, 1473

  1. May 29

    Volume 14: Noor Al-Samarrai

    1. Du’a #10 Contrapuntal With My Mother’s Wisdom 2. Journey to Iraq 1 (I try to visit in my dreams and am stopped on the tarmac) 3. Dream Market  4. Dream Market 5. چمة 6. American Dream Market 7. Dream Market (silly sonnet for l) 8. رشاد  9. طین Noor Al-Samarrai is a deeply committed poet, journalist, and educator who earned her MFA in creative writing at UM-Ann Arbor, where she was recognized as an “exceptional talent who can produce singular work that opens our eyes to the wide range of human experience.” As an undergraduate student at UC Berkeley, she studied with C.S. Giscombe, Robert Hass, and Lyn Hejinian. Noor developed an enduring love of teaching during this time, directing poetry workshops for the campus spoken word community, and further cultivated her journalistic practice. Her undergraduate thesis in political economy focused on the relationship between architecture and identity in mid-twentieth-century Baghdad. This work illuminated a lack of complex, human stories in the literature describing Baghdad and set Noor on the path to fashioning her own archive of Iraqi oral histories about pre-war Baghdad. Following her graduation from UC Berkeley, Noor pursued the life of an itinerant writer and independent scholar, first in Turkey where she volunteered as an Arabic translator for NGOs serving refugees from Syria, Iraq, and Somalia, freelanced as a journalist, and met many members of her extended family — themselves refugees from Iraq — for the first time. Then, with the support of a Fulbright fellowship, Noor moved to Amman, Jordan and dedicated herself to gathering oral histories for a documentary poetry collection about the emotional cartography of pre-war Baghdad. Noor has also worked as a journalist for Atlas Obscura, toured in 11-piece punk band Sloppy Jane, worked as a podcast producer, and written a book of fieldwork-derived poetry, “EL CERRITO,” published with Inside the Castle Press in 2018 and recipient of an honorable mention from the 2019 Arab American Book Awards. As a post-graduate Zell Fellow in poetry, she has continued work on her second book, continuing her oral history work in partnership with the Arab American National Museum’s Community History team and Allied Media Projects. Noor is partially deaf and blind, and her favorite sense is touch.  Artist Statement:  At its best, poetry offers us a form of meaning-making, amulets to carry, worry, and return to when the world becomes unrecognizable. These poems emerge from my own meaning-making practices: dreams, travels with friends, conversations with my mother and other elders, the formalized practices of oral history and historiography … In my lifetime, I haven’t yet managed to see Baghdad as a result of ongoing troubles (war, sanctions, occupation, etc). This saddens me. These are some glimpses from my practice of looking lovingly and carrying this place with me, from afar.

    20 min
  2. 09/05/2025

    Volume 10: Shannon Rae Daniels

    1. Rainbow after “The Night Blooming Cereus” 2. Landscape with the Fall of Icarus after “The Peacock Room” 3. Lying in Bed, Thinking of Dumplings after “Elegies for Paradise Valley” 4. Chinatown Koan after “Words in the Mourning Time” 5. Manistique, Michigan after “Stars” 6. Primavera after “Monet’s Waterlilies” 7. Fairytale after “Theme and Variation” 8. A Ringlet in a Ruth Asawa Sculpture after “[American Journal]” 9. January after “October” 10. Murmuration after “A Plague of Starlings” Bio: Shannon Rae Daniels is a writer and visual artist whose recent work has explored questions of impermanence, goodness, language, and beauty as they relate to the self and to communities at large — particularly American Chinatowns. Her art and writing have been recognized by the Poetry Society of America, the Random House Creative Writing Awards, The Guild of Artists & Artisans in Michigan, and the Ann Arbor District Library. She has taught arts and humanities classes at The Metropolitan Museum of Art and Boston Arts Academy. She was born and raised in New York City and currently lives in Ann Arbor, Michigan, where she is a bookseller. Artist Statement: These poems were commissioned by the AADL for the AADL 200 in response to the poetry and legacy of Robert Hayden. As someone who’s drawn to poetry that is driven by philosophical and formal elements, it was a joy to grow as a poet through this project. In my work, like Hayden’s, I too try to understand how art and beauty can wrestle with difficult questions.

    12 min
  3. 06/26/2025

    Volume 8: Owólabi Aboyade

    1. Autobiographies 2. Granny Is The Revolution 3. Blood 4. My Self Portrait #1 (After Adam Zagajewski 5. What The Bullet Said 6. Goodbye To The Gods 7. The Garden (Where My Sister Used To See Me) 8. Family Time 9. Boogie On, My Darling (For Bridget) 10. F**k A Brain 11. Stone Soup Bones 12. Detroit Dream World 1 - 4 13. Community Service Blues 14. Laid Off At the Laugh Factory (for Michael Richards) Artist Statement: Mourning is an inconvenient life-giving necessity. It is painful, yet oh so important, to mourn, to allow your world to break with recognition of what has moved along, what has been loved and lost. Even as the world seems to go on as if nothing has happened. My poetry hopes to open a space for healing within these cracks in so-called normality. You’ll find here speculative worlds, surrealism, musicality, metaphysics. I hope that my attempts to poem the vulnerability I need gives you something valuable also. About the Poet: Owólabi Aboyade is a multidimensional father/ essayist/ poet/ critic/hip hop artist (Will See Music) from Detroit. His poetry chapbook, Lee, Young Lee was published by AWE Society Press in 2024. He is a contributor to Riverwise, Geez, Therapeutic Edgelands, and Against The Current magazines. Working with his partner, sculptor and indie publisher Bridget Quinn, he is text editor of Bullet*Train, a magazine chronicling Detroit’s revolutionary culture and making meaning, a zine for people with chronic illness. He’s currently working on collapse, collected essays about grief, culture, and family in gentrifying Detroit. Owólabi has been named a Tin House Resident as well as a Radical Imagination Fellow for advancing Detroit’s culture of racial justice via arts. He is a community partner of the abolitionist collective Motor City Mobile Wellness and has been navigating kidney failure and the medical industry since 1990. He is a Kwame Dawes Mapmaker Fellow in Pacific University’s nonfiction MFA program (class of 2025).

    28 min
  4. 04/23/2025

    Volume 7: Frances Kai-Hwa Wang

    1. Did you Eat means I Love You 2. Poignant Truth, Precarious You, and Preparing for the Sriracha Apocalypse, an Excerpt 3. Crying on Airplanes 4. Tsundere Pride or You Are So Prickly, An Excerpt 5. What ever happened to Wang Da Zhong? 6. You Cannot Resist Me When My Hair is in Braids 7. Grandfather Walking 8. Academic Love Affair 9. The Arteries of our City 10. The Traveler 11. Ready to Take Flight 12. Running Hero 13. The Dinner Party 14. Suddenly Spring Artist's Statement "When I was on my high school’s speech and debate team, I read Time, Newsweek, and U.S. News every week. I came across an article about how Asian Americans were good at math and science but were not good leaders. I believed it without question because I thought that if it was published, it had to be true. My father simply said, “China has a 4,000 year history — who do you think was leading it?” I suddenly realized that because I come from a different background, there are things that I can see, connections that I can make, stories that I can tell that others cannot. Slowly, I came to trust the questions that only I was asking. Over time, I realized that because I am privileged to be educated, English speaking, and a U.S. citizen, I should use my privilege to speak up for others. I push back because I can, because someone has to. I write the stories that no one else is writing. And I always stop to translate for lost Chinese grandmas. I am one of a handful of writers who has been writing consistently for and about Asian American, Pacific Islander, and Arab American diasporic communities for over twenty years. I have written as a journalist, essayist, and prose poet. My next project is a book called, “Writing to Save the World.” In these political times, especially with the new Republican administration, the war in Gaza, and increasing anti-immigrant hate and violence, we must find commonalities and ways to better understand each other. Through writing and creating art, we can change hearts, lift up communities, and move people to action." - Frances Kai-Hwa Wang Artist Bio Frances Kai-Hwa Wang is a poet, essayist, journalist, and scholar focused on issues of Asian America, race, justice, and the arts. The child of immigrants, she has worked in philosophy, journalism, ethnic new media, anthropology, international development, nonprofits, and small business start-ups. Her writing has appeared at PBS NewsHour, NBC Asian America, PRI Global Nation, Angry Asian Man, Cha Asian Literary Journal, Kartika Review, Drunken Boat, and several anthologies, journals, and art exhibitions. She has taught Asian/Pacific Islander American studies at the University of Michigan and creative writing at the University of Hawaii Hilo and Washtenaw Community College. She was Executive Director of American Citizens for Justice and Asian Pacific American Chamber of Commerce. She is a co-founder of IS/LAND Asian American Contemporary Performance Collaborative. She co-created a multimedia artwork for the Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center, “Dreams of the Diaspora.” She has written three chapbooks and a book of prose poetry, “You Cannot Resist Me When My Hair Is in Braids,” Wayne State University Press, 2022. In Chinese School, she was often scolded for having the best spoken Chinese in class and the worst written Chinese. About the Coolidge-Wagner Anthology of Recorded Poetry The Ann Arbor District Library, Fifth Avenue Studios, and 1473 are proud to present The Coolidge-Wagner Anthology of Recorded Poetry. This series was created to celebrate and document the art of poetry in recorded form. Featuring poets from Ann Arbor, metro Detroit, and beyond, we hope that this series showcases and archives the incredible poetry scene here in Ann Arbor, metro Detroit, and beyond. The Coolidge-Wagner Anthology of Recorded Poetry is named after and dedicated to two of my high school teachers, Judi Coolidge and Tom Wagner (RIP) of Bay High School (Ohio), who encouraged in me, as well as thousands of their other students, a lifelong appreciation and open-minded love of the arts. -Chien-An Yuan, 1473

    41 min

About

The Ann Arbor District Library, Fifth Avenue Studios, and 1473 are proud to present The Coolidge-Wagner Anthology of Recorded Poetry. This series was created to celebrate and document the art of poetry in recorded form. Featuring poets from Ann Arbor, metro Detroit, and beyond, we hope that this series showcases and archives the incredible poetry scene here in Ann Arbor, metro Detroit, and beyond. The Coolidge-Wagner Anthology of Recorded Poetry is named after and dedicated to two of my high school teachers, Judi Coolidge and Tom Wagner (RIP) of Bay High School (Ohio), who encouraged in me, as well as thousands of their other students, a lifelong appreciation and open-minded love of the arts. -Chien-An Yuan, 1473