retrovirology

Poems

Committed to ‘remember what everyone wants to forget,’ retrovirology is stirring, persuasive proof that courage and outrage have mattered, and still can. The subjects here: intimacy and revolution, history and our rights, and equally, the slow burn of queer joy, the unstoppable fire of queer visibility. John Bonanni makes from that fire an essential music.
Carl Phillips, author of Scattered Snows, to the North

retrovirology oscillates between Queer childhood erasure and the AIDS epidemic, pulling from the ACT UP oral history project, informal interviews with survivors, and AIDS historians Sarah Schulman and David France. While some poems elegize key figures of AIDS history such as Larry Kramer and Gaeton Dugas, others operate as ekphrasis against the creative artwork of ACT UP’s direct actions. Combining reinterpretations of formal elements such as the concrete poem, the abecedarian, and the villanelle, post-confessional poems converse with a docupoetic history through an arc that examines what it meant to grow up Queer as a child in rural Pennsylvania in the late ’80s and early ’90s, surrounded by messages of gay disease and the violence of its silences. retrovirology, then, resurrects Queer elders to allow memory to “rise from its subjugated state” (Jung) and to carry with it, into our futures, all of its wisdom and fire.

80 Pages, 6 x 9 in.

September, 2026

isbn : 9780822968351

about the author

John Bonanni

John Bonanni founded and edits the Cape Cod Review. His poems have appeared in North American Review, Foglifter, Black Warrior Review, Washington Square Review, Florida Review, and Gulf Coast, and his literary criticism has been featured in DIAGRAM, Denver Quarterly, The Rumpus, and The Kenyon Review. He lives on Cape Cod, MA.

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John Bonanni