Dead Girl Cameo, m. mick powell
Dead Girl Cameo, m. mick powell
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Dead Girl Cameo
A Love Song in Poems

Author: m. mick powell

Narrator: m. mick powell

Unabridged: 2 hr 12 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 08/05/2025


Synopsis

A dazzling docupoetic debut collection interweaving personal loss with the life stories of Aaliyah Haughton, Whitney Houston, Lisa “Left Eye” Lopes, Phyllis Hyman, Selena Quintanilla-Pérez, and others to explore sexuality, survival, queer mourning, and the afterlives of stardom

“Poet m. mick powell’s debut collection . . . resurrects their vivid lives and artistry to paint a more humanizing picture of their legacy.”—USA Today

A DEBUTIFUL AND NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR

“I made, of my bones, an earth for you: turned the oceans
your favorite shade of light, that deepened, nearly bruised
dusk. Reflected in my palms, what I’ve made into water
glows amethyst”

In m. mick powell’s polyphonic, haunting debut, a chorus of voices conjures up intimate pop herstories to map how the poet’s queer Black girlhood was molded by their memory. With tender reverence, powell meditates on the deaths of her own beloveds while reflecting on the many stages of an icon’s life: How did these women challenge conventional representations of Black femininity and transform the musical landscape? How did they navigate abuse and alienation in the limelight? How do the mythologies that survive them establish afterlives of queer femme possibility?

Through sensual imagery, speculative verse, and splendid wordplay, Dead Girl Cameo takes us beyond the headlines, innovating a Black feminist poetic that traverses the richly textured realms of grief, girlhood, love, widowing, femme friendship, and queer fandom.

About The Author

m. mick powell is a queer Black Cape Verdean femme, a poet, an artist, an Aries, and author of the chapbooks threesome in the last Toyota Celica and chronicle the body. Their poems have been nominated for the Best of the Net Anthology and a Pushcart Prize, and appear in RHINO, Muzzle, Up the Staircase Quarterly, and elsewhere. mick is a professor of gender and sexuality studies at the University of Connecticut and an adjunct in Bay Path University’s MFA in creative nonfiction writing program. A former Tin House Resident, she enjoys chasing waterfalls and being in love.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Kasa on July 09, 2025

Powerful poetry collection dedicated to the early passing of iconic, talented women of color. Evocative and heartbreaking.......more

Goodreads review by Kara on August 05, 2025

A FORMATTING NOTE: The ebook is VERY difficult to read on an e reader in some places. There are some font choices that I'm sure print beautifully, but they are so small and faint on the e ink screen that it was almost illegible. I would recommend the print version if you are able. Dead Girl Cameo: A......more

Goodreads review by Raven on June 19, 2025

I did like this book but the format was a bit all over the place for me even for a free verse poetry book. I honestly did like the poems themselves but wish the book was put together a bit better. Thanks NetGalley and Random House for this ARC read. 3/5......more

Goodreads review by Danna on June 13, 2025

Dead Girl Cameo was a unique, little book of poems that I thoroughly enjoyed. I'm not much of a poetry reader, but the topic called to me when I saw some of my favorite female, Black vocal artists were featured. It's short, not always easy to follow, but if you're into the subject matter, I think it......more

Goodreads review by Susie on July 21, 2025

An inventive, poignant, moving poetry collection about beloved Black women we lost too soon, from Minnie Riperton to Whitney Houston to Aaliyah. Weaving in headlines, lyrics, and interview quotes, m. mick powell explores love, loss, grief, queerness, and possibility in a way you'll never forget.......more


Quotes

“powell is a ferocious writer with an unapologetic voice. She explores how we treat our heroes, and what heroes do and do not owe us. The poems are odes to those we lost (Whitney Houston, Left Eye) and a reminder that we’re all hiding pain. Moving and refreshing. A knockout.—Debutiful

“In poet m. mick powell’s debut collection, Dead Girl Cameo, the deaths of iconic Black female singers and musicians—Whitney Houston, Aaliyah, Lisa ‘Left Eye’ Lopes, Billie Holiday and Phyllis Hyman—go beyond the headlines. Powell resurrects their vivid lives and artistry to paint a more humanizing picture of their legacy while exploring themes of sexuality, survival, grief and stardom.”USA Today

“This lyrical and haunting debut poetry collection follows the lives of music icons, including Aaliyah, Selena, Whitney Houston, and more. It reflects on the work they have done that impacted the author’s childhood as a queer Black woman. These icons transformed more than just the music industry; their artistry shaped generations of fans beyond their time.”She Reads

Dead Girl Cameo: A Love Song in Poems is a poetry collection described as ‘docupoetry,’ a form that blends existing material with the poet’s own words, much like found footage in film. In this work, Powell creates a love letter to Black musicians whose legacies endure far beyond their tragically short lives. Drawing on interviews with Tammi Terrell, Minnie Riperton, and others, the poems form a textured collage where archival voices meet lyrical reflection. The collection is deeply personal to Powell, yet it resonates with readers through a shared parasocial connection to these powerful women.”Platform

“A bricolage of ghosts, stardust, music hits, and generational trauma, Dead Girl Cameo offers a unique path to communication with ancestors and asks those still living to consider what becomes of discarded idols.”The Rumpus

“Studded with perfect little jewels of looking, of feeling, of deep knowing . . . These poems haunt, and celebrate, and mourn, and, to borrow the poet’s own language, invent ‘other words for gold.’ I adore this book, and I look forward to seeing its work in the world.”—Safia Elhillo, author of Girls That Never Die

Dead Girl Cameo is not only an interrogation of the way society and celebrity culture fails girls, particularly those who are Black and queer; it is also a generous imagining of the lives that are possible when girlhood is protected and tended to.”—Brittany Rogers, author of Good Dress

“An orchestra of tenderness marks the brilliance of this book. mick is a star.”—Camonghne Felix, author of Dyscalculia

“Through an innovative blend of queer feminist theory, collage, and docupoetics, powell pens a gorgeous elegy to some of our greats and revives them in perpetuity by countering their life’s violence with a love that is pure, queer, and infinite.”—Dr. Taylor Byas, author of I Done Clicked My Heels Three Times

Dead Girl Cameo stitches many tender odes, counternarratives, and snapshots of Black girlhood—from the violence to the beauty of it—into the warmest protective quilt for its subjects. powell’s formal and lyrical prowess make Dead Girl Cameo a propulsive and genius debut that I’ll never stop thinking about.”—Jae Nichelle, author of God Themselves

Dead Girl Cameo is a revelation, returning pounds of flesh to our fallen icons with a lyric pulse strong enough to resurrect. Its pages reach through the mycelial network of Black queer girlhood, recovering the fugitive eros of their lives.”—Kemi Alabi, author of Against Heaven