"Laura’s Desires does something that I think poetry can do best, which is give form to literature that makes space to write about contemporary artifacts—films, songs, ideas—without the dressings of other writing genres that necessitate backstory and character building. In the poem, you can simply speak."
—Ben Fama, BOMB
"“Laura’s Desires,” the eponymous long poem of the forthcoming Laura’s Desires (Nightboat, March 2024) examines bodies and how they gather–in subway cars and movie theaters, on camping trips and at living room sex parties. The poem manages to create on the page the same spaces of possibility that I seek at an in-person reading. Encounters between the speaker and lovers, friends, strangers, art, and the natural world provide sustained and fleeting moments." —Stella-Ann Harris, Air/Light
"The book is whip-smart, authentic, grounded and visionary. Henriksen’s attention to each line (“cars, trash bags tripping aimless”) is exemplary—I couldn’t find a dull one. Reading it is the perfect way to spend a full-moon evening."
—emily brandt, Open Language
"What a dull world we’d have to put up with if desire didn’t mean too much! Laura Henriksen’s lust for life leads her into reverie. In a magnificent pair of philosophical poem-essays, Henriksen twangs the elastics that stretch from the subject to God, from want to social possibility, from peat moss to sexed being. As the detente that paused the sex wars collapses, I’m personally grateful that Henriksen is on the side of women who fuck and think about it."
—Kay Gabriel
"Laura’s Desires blasts open the possessive suffix in its own title, showing us how desire is never one’s own insofar as it always belongs to someone else–a lover’s gaze, an imagined other. The ever-deferred answer to the question “what do you want?” moves this unnerving inquiry into a politics of feminist desire that finds liberation in its own dependency. What I love most is the way the book braids together the language of criticism and autobiography into a third, more luminous prose, one through which, at the edge of sleep, a softer, more permeable self is restored to the collective where it belongs."
—Mirene Arsanios
"It is rare to encounter writing without ego, writing out of giving or generosity. Generosity being insight into the uncertainty of the writer’s conviction and authority itself—giving over to the possibility that she is unreal, made of dreaming, wisps of choruses barely heard on HOT 97, and being released from the “temporary numb despotism of being anyone at all.” The luminosity of Laura’s Desires, the joy of it and its insight, is how it communicates recording—little black marks we call words, scores of recorded songs, horror films that both play back and isolate our terror—as an act of poetic power that is in a symbiotic cuddle with having no idea what is going on, yet urgently going on. A beautiful, gentle, and fiercely intelligent book, of our time and for us."
—Simone White
"[B]y turns philosophical and playful, serious and sexy, personal and expansive. Together, they examine how the tributaries of our individual longing can flow toward the goal of collective liberation."
—Rebecca von Laer, Full Stop