Ashley M. Jones and other publications. Jones holds an MFA in Poetry from Florida International University, and she is currently a PhD student in English at Old Dominion University. She is the founding director of the Magic City Poetry Festival in Birmingham, Alabama.
PRAISE FOR ASHLEY M. JONES “Ashley M. Jones’s Lullaby for the Grieving is hallowed, haunting song. This book meditates on the loss of a beloved father with tender lyric. Jones is one of the best poets writing today and these poems are compelling evidence. The poems are formally rigorous, deeply affecting, and possess a moral clarity too often lacking in contemporary discourse. This is one of my favorite books.” —Nate Marshall, author of Finna “Known for her piercing prose on Black womanhood, life in the American South and past and present-day manifestations of racism in Alabama, [Jones is] a Black woman who is unflinching in her criticism of those in power, the censorship of Black history in schools, housing discrimination, police violence and the ways racism and white supremacy persist.” —New York Times “In a few lines, she can slip from weary to witty to wary—but never defeated.” —Ron Charles, The Washington Post Book World “What a massive undertaking, and what an achievement.” —Hanif Abdurraqib, author of A Fortune For Your Disaster for Reparations Now! “The poet reckons with a seemingly ceaseless grief while acknowledging the light that keeps us facing forward—the fact that being beautiful and black does not require a revolution.” —Patricia Smith, author of Incendiary Art, Finalist for the Pulitzer Prize “Jones manifests space to feel all of the feelings that come with being Black in a world that constantly seeks to snuff out Blackness.” —Ashia Ajani, EcoTheo Review “Ashley M. Jones is a genius in how she wields, innovates, and wades through a bounty of poetic forms (sonnets, an aubade, a ghazal, a contrapuntal, anaphora, the subjunctive mode and so much more) with a sense of mastery, levity, and play.” —Tiana Clark, author of I Can't Talk About the Trees Without the Blood “Jones’s poems are alive with ghost and kin, God and Black girls, and all are sung, SANG really, under her capable hand.” —Danez Smith, Author of [insert] boy “Ashley M. Jones is exact and exacting.” —Jericho Brown, author of The New Testament