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The Way Disabled People Love Each Other

The Way Disabled People Love Each Other

(Pre-Order, April 7 2026)

Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha
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The latest poetry collection by the award-winning author of Tonguebreaker, Care Work, and The Future Is Disabled

Lambda Award-winning poet, memoirist, and disability justice movement worker Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha returns with their long-awaited fifth collection of poems, written over five years of pandemic lockdown, during which time they lost cherished friends and comrades and met their estranged parents' end of life.

The Way Disabled People Love Each Other is a fierce crip reckoning with all the ways disabled people love each other, in all our complexity. A book that will speak to any kind of griever, but particularly disabled QTBIPOC ones sitting with the endless mass grief and possibility of this time, and those with violent family from whom we still yearn to claw out beauty from the trauma rubble. It's a road map for survivors looking for something that's neither a happy Hollywood ending nor a transformative justice fairy tale--not the healing we wished for, but the healing we find anyway.

This collection is a rigorous, rueful documentation of a specific time of pandemic fascist grief and possibility. Brimming with odes, elegies, and mourning songs, these poems sparkle like switchblades and offer new possibilities for love, grief, and memory.

 

Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha (they/them) is the author or co-editor of ten books, including The Future Is Disabled: Prophecies, Love Notes, and Mourning SongsTonguebreakerCare Work: Dreaming Disability Justice (all Arsenal Pulp Press); and Beyond Survival: Stories and Strategies from the Transformative Justice Movement (AK Press), co-edited with Ejeris Dixon. A Disability Futures Fellow, Lambda and Jeanne Cordova Award winner, five-time Publishing Triangle shortlister, and longtime disabled QTBIPOC space maker, they are currently building Living Altars, a cultural space by and for disabled QTBIPOC writers. They live in Philadelphia, PA.

 

"Leah is our most fearless chronicler of crip life, which means they've got one of the biggest hearts alive in a body that also wields the fiercest pen. Their work has been a lodestar for so many of us who have had our hearts broken by ableism's insidious and rampant effects, and this book is yet another shining pinnacle to follow--arriving, as Leah often does, at exactly the right moment. Not only does Leah know the specific and abundant universe of this heartbreak in their bones, but they also know how to transmute that brokenness into image and story, action and catharsis, solidarity and legacy. This book is a major achievement, a document that shimmers with crip survival, grief, loss, pain, love, and life. We always say about Leah that their books are urgent, of this time and the necessities of the present--but for me they are at once an ancient soothsayer, a reporter from the front lines, and the one we'll be reading in 100 years. What can I say? They're the best of us." --Johanna Hedva, author of How to Tell When We Will Die: On Pain, Disability, and Doom

"Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha's The Way Disabled People Love Each Other hinges on the question 'Who mourns when disabled people die?' This, as Piepzna-Samarasinha knows, cannot be answered without touching this inquiry's twin: 'Who celebrates disabled life?' Every bloody, intimate, elegiac page of The Way Disabled People Love Each Other is an offering to the gods of disabled vivacity and a bullet launched another centimetre closer to that which seeks to kill us." --Cyrée Jarelle Johnson, author of SLINGSHOT and WATCHNIGHT

"This is Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha, who always saves our lives, always steals us back to ourselves, always insists on the gritty everyday of survival. But in this particular collection of elegies, laments, spells and witness is Leah at their most June Jordan, their most generous, offering the grieving heart our grieving hearts need." --Alexis Pauline Gumbs, author of Survival Is a Promise: The Eternal Life of Audre Lorde

"With adept, hard-won magic, Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha transforms the endlessness of disabled grief into an endlessness rooted in remembering (celestial, earthly, everywhere), loving (fiercely, wordlessly, imperfectly), and surviving (while howling and breaking). The Way Disabled People Love Each Other is what poetry is meant to be, a photobook, an altar, and a composite of community crip wisdom you return to over and over when nothing feels real and you need something that is. This is a collection where the pages sizzle, ancestors cackle and dance with you, smoke lingers in the room, and you know you'll never have to fight alone." --Jane Shi, author of echolalia echolalia

 

  • Publisher: Arsenal Pulp Press
  • Publish Date: April 7, 2026
  • Pages: 128
  • Language: English
  • Type: Paperback
  • EAN/UPC: 9781834050300
  • Dimensions: N/A
  • BISAC Categories: Poetry
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