This poet wrote that a dead snake is not a biblical symbol, merely something “that loves itself so much it moves across / the boundaries of death to touch itself / once more.” Another poem by this author of “Torn” admits, “I still want to kill the carrots because I can.” This poet appeals for a “song that says my bones / are your bones, and your bones are my bones, / and isn’t that enough?” in a poem that criticizes the ritual of singing another song before “the pummeling of youth.” The call, “Ears up, girls, ears up!” appears in a poem by this author that boasts of a “huge beating genius machine” that knows “it’s going to come in first.” That poem begins, “I like the lady horses best,” and opens her book Bright Dead Things. For 10 points, name this author of “A New National Anthem” and “How to Triumph Like a Girl,” the current US Poet Laureate. ■END■
ANSWER: Ada Limón (“lee-MOHN”) (The second poem is “I Remember the Carrots.”)
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