Guilt Ledger & Is the Root of All (signed)


$27.95

The new full-length and its companion chap. Signed by the author, who, if he knows you, will write a very loving message in the full-length.

Release date: February 2027

Consolidated shipping notice: If you order this item with another item, they’ll ship together when Guilt Ledger is released.

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Description

Get the new full-length and a limited-edition companion chapbook of b-sides.

In Guilt Ledger, winner of the Wren Poetry Prize, money is a weight, a wound, and a reckoning. Opening amid the fallout of the savings and loan scandal of the late 1980s, this collection maps the complex and corrosive impact of the financial sector on a family. It charts a childhood in the banking centers of the South and the speaker’s acceptance of late-stage capitalism’s unpayable cost: the emotional loss tied to monetary gain. These poems interrogate the tangled legacy between fathers and sons, the hidden debts and moral consequences of the American economic system, and the persistent echoes of a culture that commodifies everything it touches.

“Guilt Ledger tells a story of inheritances and indelible impressions—’Consider each family a mint of sorts,’ it declares.  Ross White’s collection captures a very particular era of American banking scandal, but it is about so much more. Among the poet’s formidable talents are his ability to use unexpected vessels for portraiture, pattern-making, and dark humor. ‘Today they fired the receptionist,’ observes ‘Downsizing.’ ‘Today they fired the efficiency expert who conducted the first round of firings./…They fired the list of fireable offenses./…Fired the hand that could no longer sign its name.’ Those who have passed through Washington, D.C., will recognize the martini-brine of ‘temples to transactionality’ and feel the particular thrill of the Red Line metro whooshing past. Reading Guilt Ledger opens a door for me—to talking about economic wreckage, mistakes of our fathers, mistakes we keep making—and I find myself deeply grateful for these daring, profoundly moving poems.” —Sandra Beasley, author of Made to Explode