Natalie Diaz, winner of the 2021 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry and the 2012 Narrative Prize, is the author of the poetry collections When My Brother Was an Aztec and Postcolonial Love Poem. A Mojave and Pima tribe member, she grew up in the Fort Mojave Indian Village in Needles, California. After playing professional basketball in Europe and Asia for several years, she completed an MFA at Old Dominion University. Diaz lives in Mohave Valley, Arizona, and directs a language revitalization program with the last Elder speakers of the Mojave language.

Photograph © John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation.


2021 PULITZER
PRIZE WINNER

Four Poems

by Natalie Diaz

Toward the Amaranth Gates of War or Love

Tonight the city is glimmered.

       What’s left of an August monsoon
is heat and wet. Beyond the open window,

       the streetlamp is a honey-skirted hive I could split
with my hand, my palm a pool of light.


       On the television screen, bombs like silvery bells
toll above blurred horizon—

       All I know of war is win.
What is a wall if not a thing to be pressed against?

       What is a bedroom if not an epicenter
of pillage? And what can I do with a hundred houses

       but abandon them as spent shells of desire?

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