- Cafe
- Bookstore
- Upcoming events
- Book an event
- Catering
- Institutional and bulk sales
- About Red Emma's
- Press
- Buy gift cards
- Red Emma's merch
- Donate to the Red Emma's Education Fund
Lambda Award-winning poet, memoirist, and disability justice movement worker Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha returns with their long-awaited fifth collection of poems, written over five years of pandemic lockdown, during which time they lost a cherished friend and comrade and met their estranged parents' end of life.
The Way Disabled People Love Each Other is a fierce crip reckoning with all the ways disabled people love each other, in all our complexity. A book that will speak to any kind of griever, but particularly disabled BIPOC queer trans ones sitting with the endless mass grief and possibility of this time, and those with violent family from whom we still yearn to claw out beauty from the trauma rubble. It's a road map for survivors looking for something that's neither a happy Hollywood ending nor a transformative justice fairy tale - not the healing we wished for, but the healing we find anyway.
This collection is a rigorous, rueful documentation of a specific time of pandemic fascist grief and possibility. Brimming with odes, elegies, and mourning songs, these poems sparkle like switchblades and offer new possibilities for love, grief, and memory.
LEAH LAKSHMI PIEPZNA-SAMARASINHA (they/them) is a disabled writer, disability and transformative justice cultural worker and notorious hot bitch of Burgher and Tamil Sri Lankan, Irish and Ukrainian/Galician/Roma ascent. They are the author or co-editor of eleven books, including The Future Is Disabled: Prophecies, Love Notes, and Mourning Songs; Beyond Survival: Stories and Strategies from the Transformative Justice Movement (co-edited with Ejeris Dixon); Tonguebreaker; and Care Work: Dreaming Disability Justice. A Lambda and Jeanne Córdova Award winner, five-time Publishing Triangle shortlister and longtime disabled QTBIPOC space maker, they are currently building Living Altars, connecting and building power by and for disabled QTBIPOC writers, and the Stacey Park Milbern Liberation Art Residency, North America’s only writers’ residency by and for disabled QTBIPOC writers. Raised in Worcester, MA, with roots in Toronto, Seattle and Oakland, they currently live in Lenapehoking/ Philadelphia. They are Jackie and Anna’s grandfemme, a non-binary femme on the stoop, a survivor and grown-up runaway making home and family. They are powered by hyperfocus, the silence, the cackle and the couch. Follow them at brownstargirl.org and their Substack, Postcards from the End of the World llps.substack.com.
