
Genre:
Poetry
Themes:
Historical
Archetypes:
Museum Curator / Conservator / Historian
Teacher / Professor
Writer/ Author
Geographic Location:
Asia / Pacific Islands
United States: Pacific
Setting:
Historical
Island
Suburban
Wilderness / Outback
Sexual / Gender Identity:
Bi or Pansexual
Lesbian
Queer
Protagonist Identity:
Native American / Indigenous Person / First Nations
Native Hawaiian / Pacific Islander
Trigger/Content Warning:
Historical accuracy of Kingdom of Hawai'i
Ask the Brindled: Poems
By No'u Revilla
Ask the Brindled bares everything that breaks between “seed” and “summit” of a life—the body, a people, their language. It is an intergenerational reclamation of the narratives foisted upon Indigenous and queer Hawaiians—and it does not let readers look away.
In this debut collection, No‘u Revilla crafts a lyric landscape brimming with shed skin, water, mo‘o, ma‘i. She grips language like a fistful of wet guts and inks the page red—for desire, for love, for generations of blood spilled by colonizers. She hides knives in her hair “the way my grandmother—not god— / the way my grandmother intended,” and we heed; before her, “we stunned insects dangle.” Wedding the history of the Kingdom of Hawaiʻi with contemporary experiences of queer love and queer grief, Revilla writes toward sovereignty: linguistic, erotic, civic. Through the medium of formal dynamism and the material of ʻŌiwi culture and mythos, this living decolonial text both condemns and creates.
Ask the Brindled is a song from the shattered throat that refuses to be silenced. It is a testament to queer Indigenous women who carry baskets of names and stories, “still sacred.” It is a vow to those yet to come: “the ea of enough is our daughters / our daughters need to believe they are enough.”