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territory monsters can't be refreshed Wayward Creatures by heidi andrea restrepo rhodes

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territory monsters can't be refreshed Wayward Creatures by heidi andrea restrepo rhodesFinalist for the 2026 Williams Carlos Williams Award Shortlisted for Lambda Literary Art's 2026 LGBTQ+ Poetry Lammy Award With monstrous joy and tenderness untamed, Wayward Creatures is a collection that spills with the verdant language of excess, inviting us to step into its wild grasses. Here, the colonizers language has been overgrown by an ecology of strangeness and possibilitypoetry disrupts, rituals, and revolts, rendering queer abolition

★ Finalist for the 2026 Williams Carlos Williams Award
★ Shortlisted for Lambda Literary Art's 2026 LGBTQ+ Poetry Lammy Award

With monstrous joy and tenderness untamed, Wayward Creatures is a collection that spills with the verdant language of excess, inviting us to step into its wild grasses. Here, the colonizer’s language has been overgrown by an ecology of strangeness and possibility—poetry disrupts, rituals, and revolts, rendering queer abolition irresistible. 

heidi andrea restrepo rhodes offers poems as portals into a “wilderness of intimacies” where the crip marvelous, the sacred profane, and trans love emerge in an ecstatic throng. With a poetics that resists taxonomy, many voices surge through this collection. They speak us new names, and urge us toward vibrant becomings. 

This is deeply necessary, restorative work—kinning marigolds, cicadas, fungi, universes—Wayward Creatures dismantles the myth of separateness, inviting us to allow ourselves to be nourished by this living entanglement, ignited by mutual spark. From the burning map of this lexicon, may we learn “lessons / of fire,” how to “tend a basic flame / & char down the plantation.”

With an introduction by award-winning poet and scholar Meg Day.

Wayward Creatures is a vivid, sensuous chorus of grief and becoming. heidi andrea restrepo rhodes invites us to abandon the tidy myth of coherence and enter a proliferating languagefungal, tender, feral with pain and joy. These are poems of sacred monstrosity and “too much infinity,” where selves refuse erasure and emerge in exquisite multiplicity, unspooled across timelines and pleasure fields. A galaxy of kinships swells through these pages, whispering, howling, “what exceeds the catalogue of Discovery.” These poems do not flinch from obliteration, chronic illness, or state violencebut they do not end there. They wander, sensate and ungovernable, through ecological time and trans love, opening portals. This is a body book, a spell of plural pronouns and uncertain moons. “I remain / uncontained.” May we all.  Oliver Baez Bendorf, author of Consider the Rooster

This is a monster of a book, an ecology of being in which all bodies are poems and all poems are bodies. rhodes asks the reader: How does the poem of us begin? Then, proceeds to dismantle the notion of beginning and ending. In Wayward Creatures, time is a branch from which we fruit, die, and bud again. It is the dark unknowable depth of space. It is the constellatory nature of queer love. Tucked into these pages is the book of crip dreams, which is a kind of scripture, and is also the book you are touching now—with your hot and human hands. Gala Mukomolova, author of Without Protection

In Wayward Creatures, heidi andrea restrepo rhodes works with language to find such lush and sonic expanses within which we are alive, might live, (might) have lived. Emerging from shapeshifting collectives, these striking, sensuous poems are vibrant with dreaming and embodied political analysis. Coded, incandescent, with so much we in the tongues, heidi andrea restrepo rhodes re-members us into our need. They are at work here on such gorgeous, such powerful paths out of violent structures and toward each other: “In the book of eating clouds with kin, upon the heart of my mutiny, I am here.” aracelis girmay, author of the black maria

For those who seek out poetry to portal to a universe in which colonial laws and borders define neither the contours nor the intimate interiors of our queer, sick, and disabled bodies, heidi andrea restrepo rhodes’s Wayward Creatures is that open door to our otherwhere. Unruly and teeming with fungal splendor, these poems howl at us “monster up” as we step into a future of unknowns, dragging all of our gorgeously terrible with us and our unbound devotion to each other. Muriel Leung, author of How to Fall in Love in a Time of Unnameable Disaster

heidi andrea restrepo rhodes is a queer, non-binary, crip/disabled, brown, writer, artist, scholar, educator, cultural worker and creature of the Colombian diaspora. Their books include The Inheritance of Haunting, Afterlives of Discovery: Speculative Geographies in the Settler Colonial Imaginary, Wayward Creatures, and Ampersand Organ: a more-than-human lyric. They are a professor of feminist, queer, and disability studies; and poetry co-editor at Apogee Journal. A VONA Alum, and 2023 recipient of the Creative Capital Award, they have received poetry fellowships from Zoeglossia, CantoMundo, Radar Productions, and Yale’s Center for the Study of Race, Indigeneity, and Transnational Migration. Their poetry and creative non-fiction have been published in American Poetry Review, The Normal School, Michigan Quarterly Review, Alocasia, Poetry, and Waxwing, among other places.

✦ Online Publications ✦

Poetry Foundation, Disability Poetics: Poetry of Liberation, A small disunified theory

Poetry Magazine, Letras Latinas 20th anniversary One Poem Festival folio, “Transgender opera for perpetual metamorphosis”

Boston Review Online,“Blessed are thou amongst”

Georgia Review, Crip Time-Loop Pantoum”, “Murmuring in the Dark” and “If God is a Virus”;

Tupelo Quarterly: American Ugly

160 pages
ISBN: 978-1-7376050-8-9
Short ISBN: 1-7376050-8-2
LCCN: 2025937852
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SKU: 79110013774

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Russ White
West Palm Beach, US
★★★★★ 4
Great Foundational Book
Format: Hardcover
If you've ever wondered how the major pieces of Christian theology --things like the Trinity, Predestination, and Baptism-- you will find them here. Dr. Olson, a historian by trade, takes on the places, times, and movements that developed and hardened the Christian doctrines we know today. Essentially, this book follows a strictly chronological format, starting from the birth of the Church in the book of Acts, and carrying through to the split of the Fundamentalist movement and Reformed theology in the 20th Century. The first section deals with the fundamental heresies that came in with the founding of the Church by examining the writing of the Patristic Fathers, the Apologetic Fathers, and then focusing specifically on Irenaeus. Here the fundamental issues of the nature of Christ in his incarnation were initially resolved. Of course, many of these issues have risen again in recent time with the formation of heretical branches of Christian thought, such as the Jehovah's Witnesses and the LDS Church. The second section deals with the unity of the Church which is primarily founded on the conversion of Rome to a Christian state. While Dr. Olson does a good job of explain the good results of the unity of the Church, he doesn't cover the concerns of those Christians who objected to the sacralism of merging the state and church, and using state power to impose consistency of theology. The major argument over the nature of the Trinity is dealt with in the fourth section, and the fifth returns to the nature of Christ. Section five describes the split between the Eastern and Western church over the issue of the procession of the Spirit --does the Spirit proceed only from the Father, or from the Father and the Son. According to Dr. Olson, the theological quarrel was founded on different views of the place of Scripture and hermeneutics. Martin Luther, John Calvin, and the Reformers are covered in the seventh section. Dr. Olson provides good insight into the relationship between the various Reformers, laying the groundwork for the ultimate split of the Reformed movement described in section eight. The author's ability to lay out the relationships in this section provides a very easy to understand historical picture, though he tends to downplay the role and objections of the Anabaptists, and the sacralizing power grounded in Constantinian Christianity. In the final section Dr. Olson discusses the split between liberal and conservative Christianity, the split between fundamentalism and mainline Christianity. Some of the most interesting pieces he discusses here relate to the role of Billy Graham's ministry, and the role of various schools, strong personalities, and even the impact of scientific thinking in this era. A long read, but a good basis from which to reach out and investigate Christian history and theology.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 12, 2012
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J.D. Jones
Grantham, US
★★★★★ 5
Great Read for "Emerging" Christians (Kindle edition)
Format: Hardcover
I have a lot to say which is positive about this book, but first let me say my one disappointment: In his review of theological development of the 20th century, he completely skipped over the pentecostal and charismatic movements. He spent lots of time discussing liberation and feminist theologies, but skipped over these massive movements which claim followers in the 100s of millions. This is surprising to me do to the author's pentecostal roots and the fact that he is a solidly evangelical theologian. It could be argued that these movements haven't introduce "new doctrine" but rather just a "new emphasis" on existing doctrines such as spiritual gifts or the Holy Spirit. True, but then why did he spend so much time discussing the Pietists for whom the same could be argued. The theological influence of the pentecostal and charismatic movements is significant and their omission is glaring. Other than that... This is a timely book, especially for younger Christians. So many "emerging" Christians are writing books and spouting off ideas which they take to be new and innovative. Reading this book shows you just how tiered they are. Reading Olson's chapter on the emergence of 19th century theological liberalism in Germany reminded me of the last Brian McLaren book I read. Same ideas, but but in the context of church history one realises that these "new perspectives" have already been tried and found wanting. Solomon's declaration that, "There is nothing new under the sun" is what rand through my ears when I considered what a lot of hip, trendy, "innovative" preachers are saying now-a-days. Olson's dealing with Catholic and Orthodox church history was fair and unbiased given that many evangelical protestants often are when writing about them. I personally learned a lot about both the Scholastics as well as the Pietists. I also valued his perspective on Augustine. It is a great one volume work. Also, unlike the other reviewer, my Kindle version worked just fine.
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Reviewed in the United States on November 26, 2010
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Jeffrey Van Wagoner
San Leandro, US
★★★★★ 5
Now I finally have a much better understand of theology
Format: Hardcover
I have always had a fascination with Christian theology and history. What could be better than a book on the history of Christian theology? It turns out that this book exceeded my expectations. What had been a confused and fuzzy understanding of theology has now crystallized into a much clearer view of the big picture. This helps to confirm my belief that the best way to understand any subject is by learning its history. Olsen's writing style is clear, concise and very interesting. I like how he is able to summarize vast quantities of information and ideas in such a short amount of space. I'm not saying this book is short, it is still over 600 pages long, but it could have been much longer. Olsen has obvious leanings on which doctrines he supports, and those that he doesn't. I didn't find his biases distracting, and it is always nice to know which way an author is leaning. I thought he did a reasonable job presenting the variety of worldviews within Christianity in a fair manner. I personally have the most experience studying early Christianity and I still learned a lot from this book. My weakest area of understanding was in modern theology and this gave me a good view at least to the year 2000. I'll probably need to get some advice on a good book to update me on current theology. I highly recommend this book for anyone interested understanding the history and diversity of Christianity.
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Reviewed in the United States on July 6, 2009
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Charles C.
Dallas, US
★★★★★ 5
Great Church History Book - Very Readable!
Format: Hardcover
I'm really enjoying this history of theology. I'm only about 250 pages into it, but so far it has been very readable. I know it's not strictly a church history book, but it really has shed a lot of light on the people and the events that shaped the church in the first four or five centuries (that's as far as I have read so far). I now feel like I have a much better understanding what all the debates were about, and especially the major heresies that arose during those centuries, and about the meanings of some of the key terms (homoousios, homoiousios, etc.) And this is the first book that has made the byzantine debates around the Chalcedonian councils at least somewhat comprehensible to me. If the first 250 pages are any measure of how the rest of the book will be, I know it will be good! I can't wait to read about Augustine, medieval and scholastic theology, Aquinas, and especially the reformation. I'll come back after I finish the book and complete this report. So far, it's five star material for sure. Edit. After finishing this book I can only add that it is a wonderful book by a great author. The book kept my attention and was always interesting. I highly recommend it!
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Reviewed in the United States on December 19, 2019
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Rusty Russell
Omaha, US
★★★★★ 5
Super!
Format: Hardcover
A great book.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 11, 2025

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