What Love Is is a luminous and fearless exploration of love in all its forms—passionate and tender, fleeting and enduring, joyous and grief-stricken. In this deeply personal and visionary collection, acclaimed American poet and editor David Daniel examines the ways love binds and breaks us, how it arrives unexpectedly and lingers, shaping the course of our lives. Spurred by a life-altering act of kindness from poet Jean Valentine, Daniel's poems look at love as if through a kaleidoscope—lyrical, raw, funny, and unflinchingly honest, and all at once. From moments of ecstatic connection to the ache of loss, he navigates love's bewildering contradictions—a force both saving and undoing us.
A work of fierce vulnerability and imaginative brilliance, ecstatic in its melancholy, fierce and funny in its heartbreak, What Love Is affirms, again and again, that love is not just something we feel—it's something we live.
David Daniel was born in Danville, Kentucky, and was raised in Ruston, Louisiana, Asheville, North Carolina, and Murfreesboro, Tennessee. His first book, Seven-Star Bird (Graywolf Press), won the Larry Levis Reading Prize for the best first or second poetry book of the year, and his last book, Ornaments (Pitt Poetry Series), inspired poet Tom Sleigh to write, "No one in any generation is writing poems like these: smart, visceral, and immensely pleasurable to read." Daniel was the poetry editor of Ploughshares for more than a decade while teaching at Emerson College. He was also Core Faculty at the Bennington Writing Seminars MFA program. He now directs the undergraduate creative writing program at Fairleigh Dickinson University where he is also the creator of FDU's WAMFest: The Words and Music Festival. WAMFest has been celebrated for its unique arts programming by the National Endowment for the Arts, and has featured collaborative performances by Bruce Springsteen, Robert Pinsky, Chuck D, Rosanne Cash, Salman Rushdie, Talib Kweli, C.D. Wright, Jonathan Demme, and dozens of the most important artists and writers of our time. He lives with his wife and youngest son, among a bunch of cats and old guitars, in Belmont, Massachusetts.