Milk and Honey 12-Month 2024 Monthly/Weekly Agenda Calendar
Introducing your new favorite planner from inspirational poet, author, and performer Rupi Kaur. This elegant and practical agenda offers space to record your goals, dreams, and accomplishments alongside self-care tips, illustrations, and poems from Kaur's groundbreaking #1 New York Times bestselling debut, milk and honey. This 12-month planner is intentionally designed by Rupi Kaur to help you set goals for the upcoming year, check in monthly, track your progress weekly, and celebrate your accomplishments with a Year in Review. The agenda also includes unique features, such as a fold-out vision board, a Letter to Yourself exercise, illustrated stickers, and customizable labels. Features include: 6" x 8" (12" x 8" open)Soft touch perfect-bound cover with rounded cornersPrinted on FSC certified paper with soy-based inkRemovable product information bandAgenda lays flat when openTwo satin ribbon page markers12-month Planner: January-December 2024Vision board for you to createDecorative stickers and customizable labelsMonthly and weekly planning pagesYear in Review outlineExtra pages with subtle dots for writing or drawingStorage pocketOfficial major world holidays and observancesMoon phases, based on Universal TimePoems, illustrations, and self-care tips from poet, artist, and performer Rupi Kaur
Bakandamiya
Covering more than five hundred years of cultural transformation, Bakandamiya: An Elegy is a book-length epic poem set in Northern Nigeria. The poem moves from passages of mythic power to elegant lyricism with remarkable skill, subverting the legend of Bayajidda, a prince from Baghdad whose arrival reshaped the outlook of the Hausas, a Native ethnic group in West Africa. Told in part from a Bori spirit's point of view and in part through personal lyrics, part prayer and part praise song, Bakandamiya decries the loss of culture and spirituality due to colonization from both the West and the East. Even as it subverts myths and popular beliefs and addresses some of the events that led to the Nigerian civil war, it tackles the lingering question of nationhood. In this work of lyric and poetic ambition, Saddiq Dzukogi blends the personal with the mythical, expanding the griot tradition of Bakandamiya, a poetic form from Northern Nigeria popularized by Mamman Shata. Here the form travels from orature to contemporary poetics for the first time, taking its place at the vanguard of contemporary poetry.