Learn more
These promotions will be applied to this item:
Some promotions may be combined; others are not eligible to be combined with other offers. For details, please see the Terms & Conditions associated with these promotions.
Your Memberships & Subscriptions

Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required.
Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.
Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.
feeld Kindle Edition
FINALIST FOR THE PULITZER PRIZE
FINALIST FOR THE LOS ANGELES TIMES BOOK PRIZE
LONGLISTED FOR THE NATIONAL BOOK AWARD
A NEW YORKER BEST POETRY BOOK OF 2018
A VULTURE BEST POETRY BOOK OF 2018
A LIBRARY JOURNAL BEST BOOK OF 2018
Selected by Fady Joudah as a winner of the 2017 National Poetry Series, Jos Charles’s revolutionary second collection of poetry, feeld, is a lyrical unraveling of the circuitry of gender and speech, defiantly making space for bodies that have been historically denied their own vocabulary.
“i care so much abot the whord i cant reed.” In feeld, Charles stakes her claim on the language available to speak about trans experience, reckoning with the narratives that have come before by reclaiming the language of the past. In Charles’s electrifying transliteration of English—Chaucerian in affect, but revolutionary in effect—what is old is made new again. “gendre is not the tran organe / gendre is yes a hemorage.” “did u kno not a monthe goes bye / a tran i kno doesnt dye.” The world of feeld is our own, but off-kilter, distinctly queer—making visible what was formerly and forcefully hidden: trauma, liberation, strength, and joy.
Urgent and vital, feeld composes a new narrative of what it means to live inside a marked body.
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherMilkweed Editions
- Publication dateAugust 14, 2018
- File size2.3 MB
Customers who bought this item also bought
Editorial Reviews
Review
“Charles, a trans woman, turns to a sort of Chaucerian-texting hybrid in an inspired effort to find language as unstable as her experience.”―New York Times
“Dazzling . . . In Charles’s hands, the language itself transitions, defamiliarized, and in its new spellings it opens to a poly-vocality where words contain hidden meanings.”―Paris Review
“In feeld, the trans poet Jos Charles bends language, via willful spelling, to a place where it must be parsed slowly, struggled through, read not so much with the brain as the mouth. Language becomes a felt thing, a terrain to be crossed. . . . Through the strange labor of deciphering the text of feeld, I come to understand that Charles is transmitting an experience that I must allow to travel from her body into mine.”―Tracy K. Smith, New York Times
"feeld is beguiling work, reimagining a new language somewhere between Middle English and the digital world of the 21st century. With that, Charles manages an excavation of language and trans identity."―Irish Times (The Best Books By Women of the 21st Century)
“Like the title of the collection, Charles treats language like an open field, a clearing in which something new can be built. Her re-spellings embody this philosophy, challenging readers to explore the open spaces, new meanings and, perhaps, find their place in them.”―PBS NewsHour
“Completely stunning in its lyrical leaps. . . . The joy in reading this out loud, in the unraveling textures of each word. . . . Vital, tender work.”― Poetry Magazine
“Could we say Jos Charles's glorious feeld inextricates the battles for the past and for the future? feeld dives back into the wreckage, spins heart-stopping poems of trans life and struggle from the addictive, mouth-twisting lexica of Middle English.”―Jordy Rosenberg, Nylon
“With language that knocks its reader off-balance, Jos Charles's feeld makes space, builds a stage, stretches out a hand, for the trans and queer bodies so often shunted to the side.”―Bustle
“[feeld is] a totally new sound . . . an unprecedented syntax to accommodate an unprecedented experience. Every poet gropes their way towards this kind of sui generis utterance, but so few of us achieve it so absolutely.”―Kaveh Akbar, American Poetry Review
“A reinvention―words become unique, tricky, and wondrous. . . . Against a neopastoral landscape overgrown with ‘swolen leef’ and ‘boyish nectre,’ Charles explores the permutations and perforations of identity.”―BOMB
“[feeld] is a profound body of work that’s thought-provoking and wholly visceral. Ripe with natural imagery, surprising puns, and political statements that are jarring both in their truth and placement, feeld challenges the idea that writing about nature is only for straight, white, cis men.”―Shondaland
“Magic . . . Jos Charles’s feeld breaks language into almost unrecognizable spellings so that you have to trust the meaning will come as you sound out the words. The multiple meanings of homophones all come to light before one meaning is teased to the forefront by context.”―Chicago Review of Books
“feeld, in its mode and method, lives in the same world as Finnegans Wake―both books force us to reconsider how language transfers (and hides) meaning.”―The Millions
“For linguistic boldness and experimentation, it’s hard to go wrong with the poems found in Jos Charles’s collection feeld. What emerges is a blend of seemingly archaic language used to explore the nature of gender in new and unpredictable ways―and an absolutely gripping reading experience.”―Vol. 1 Brooklyn
“Richly evocative . . . We can’t read this book in a familiar way, blithely absorbed; the field requires we learn to read anew.”―Kenyon Review
“To undermine and recreate our tools of value is a revolutionary act. Jos Charles’s feeld unpacks and repacks the histories of each word with compelling lyricism, recreating the metaphors we live with and subscribe to inside."―Arkansas International
“Thrilling . . . Jos Charles’s collection feeld makes a bold linguistic move.”―Signature
“Disarming and engrossing . . . The collection undoes easy divisions between interior and exterior or science and nature. . . . Throughout, readers are subject to a careful recalibration of values, as Charles shows that a form is not important because it is static but rather because of the ways it changes, moves, and is perceived.”―Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“feeld is a rare find that will be felt and studied for a long while. To reimagine a language of one’s age is perhaps poetry’s essential task. One can’t perform this without exile from one’s language, a paradox that belongs to the spectrum of translation as primary tool for life: DNA into protein, consciousness into perception. As Chaucerian English into the digital twenty-first century, feeld is in elite company, and is arguably unheralded in its lyric inventiveness. It’s an archeology of the present (‘wee wer so nashenal’) and an anagram of the genetic code that is the body (‘lorde i am 1 / lorde i am 2 / lorde i am infinate’). If one were to rewrite feeld into standard English, the poems, with their protean registers, would still captivate us. This book masters the interchangeable. An ache of mouth, of speech, a sensory illusion of German, French, and English, of ‘hors’ and ‘glome,’ a corpus at the cusp of the ‘plesure 2 b alive’: ‘tonite I wuld luv to rite the mothe inn the guarden / 2 greev it.’ feeld reflects and emits the alienation, the estrangement, this transgender poet endures and overcomes: ‘eech hole is a vote.’ Jos Charles rearranges the alphabet to survive its ferocity against her body. Where language is weaponized, feeld is a whistleblower, a reclamation of art’s domain. The solidarity engendered here reaches beyond the specific injustice to its speakers. As feeld illuminates the field on which we incorporate our physical being, it forges an ambitious liberation.”―Fady Joudah
“In Jos Charles’s irreplaceable and enticing feeld, the future of American poetry turns out to be the early medieval past. That future is slippery and overstuffed with puns, like Spenser, or like Joyce, except way more trans. Squares of parchment, scraps from market gardens, ‘hewman partes’ (human parts; parties where men use axes, or get cut), roosters, grass, ‘harts,’ milk, privacy and the publicity of a language that has to be turned inside out and backward in order to engender, and not to misgender, what Charles wants to bring into our own time . . . ‘i am afrayde / i am riting myeself.’ Don’t be afraid. Go and listen. It should no longer be ‘tragyck / bieng undre / stood.’ ‘The tran knos.’ It’s time.”―Stephanie Burt
“An ‘inscription’ that belies its potential ‘equivalencies.’ A scene like a ‘stall,’ the ‘entrance to an institution.’ Reading Jos Charles’s feeld, I entered, as you are, the ‘thynge’ of the book: its glottal, pre-English or about-English memory. ‘bieng tran is a unique kinde off organe / i am speeching materialie / i am speeching abot hereditie,’ writes Charles, turning the mouth of a reader into an ear, as these lines are read, or imagined. Is there such a thing as an alternative silence? Form is contingent upon the means by which it traverses a territory, I understood, extending: the many ‘partes’ of this radical poetry, which spans, as it must: mornings, holes, breathing, genetics, and time so gold―‘goldenne’―it melts before it can be sold.”―Bhanu Kapil
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
thees wite skirtes / & orang
sweters / i wont / inn the feedynge marte /
wile mye vegetable partes bloome /
inn the commen waye / a grackel
inn the guarden rooste / the tall
wymon wasching handes /
or eyeing turnups
/ the sadened powres wee rub / so economicalie /
inn 1 virsion off thynges /
alarum is mye nayme
/ unkempt & handeld
i am hors /
i am sadeld / i am a brokn hors
***
II.
next inn line
at the feemale
depositrie room / mye
jossled eggs
inn a witen sack /
were that i were goldenne
mye rayte / the tayste off gold
inn eggs / cravyng a room
just emtied enuff
2 curl myeself
inn / thees the dreggs / the grl beguines
***
XVI.
gendre is not the tran organe / gendre is yes a
hemorage / the nayme scrypt & the stayte scrypt
preseed laping the milke in mye sacks / gendre lik all
sirfase is a feemale depositrie room / in that clowde
moses wept & wee exspeckte a lawe /
his fase lik lite &
r bodies goldenne in vagynoplastycitie / if u evre get
downe mye mountain / he sade pirge me with hysop /
offer mye bulock on the alter / a tran is noting but the
scens off sum burning / i a lone hav scaped 2 tell u this
***
XLVII.
i wanted so much
2 speech /
the hewman thyngs
/ i became the byrd
soot / they sent me
inn / this is wut makes us grls / thining
bye the houre
Product details
- ASIN : B07GCNM15T
- Publisher : Milkweed Editions (August 14, 2018)
- Publication date : August 14, 2018
- Language : English
- File size : 2.3 MB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Not Enabled
- Print length : 80 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #582,535 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #77 in LGBTQ+ Poetry (Kindle Store)
- #362 in LGBTQ+ Poetry (Books)
- #1,200 in Two-Hour LGBTQ+ Short Reads
- Customer Reviews:
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonTop reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews. Please reload the page.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 24, 2024Jos Charles's feeld is a linguistic marvel, boldly reimagining English to articulate the complexities of transgender experience. Through a Chaucerian-inspired language that challenges and transforms, Charles navigates themes of trauma, liberation, and queer visibility with unparalleled grace. This collection is not just poetry; it's a vital testament to the power of language in shaping and reshaping our understanding of self and society.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 16, 2020This book of poetry holds together as a collection very well. Each poem of course can stand alone, but the poems are best read as parts of a whole. feeld also is brilliant for its imaginative use of language--language that hearkens back to medieval literature while also feeling so contemporary to our questioning thoughts in the 21st century. Another bonus is the way the author uses language to interrogate gender.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 28, 2019i'm an internet obsessed medievalist and this is a work of art
- Reviewed in the United States on December 8, 2022I return this book because I found it at a library later. It is a good book.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 17, 2019Reading out out bring the joy of discovery to this book of poetry. This is the first book of poetry that I have been inspired to read in years. Fascinating in both voice and structure.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 17, 2019Absolutely amazing. Like nothing I’d ever read before.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 6, 2021Seems like poetry is a competition of who can be the most “progressive.” These poems written in some form of broken English and jibberish are colorless, as one is far too distracted deciphering the words to feel moved.
Top reviews from other countries
- hannah godfreyReviewed in Canada on October 25, 2019
5.0 out of 5 stars good
good