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We Are Our Own #1 Priority

Pam R. Johnson Davis Author Interview

No Unpaid Passengers is a collection of poetry expressing your life’s experiences and learning to choose yourself as what matters. Why was this an important collection of poetry for you to write?

Thank you for that description, it’s very accurate! Too often, we forget that we are our own priority – if we’re not taking care of ourselves, healing ourselves, and loving ourselves, it becomes almost impossible to fully show up for others in our community. And also, when we’re not prioritizing our own internal care, it can be difficult to be aware when our needs are not being met in our external relationships. If we don’t love ourselves enough, how can we ever release the people, places, and things that harm us?

This poetry collection reflects a lot of that. Much of what I write is inspired by my own healing journey, from complex family dynamics to religious trauma to racial tension – these are all things I work through with my therapist and inner circle constantly. Each poem in this book was written at a pivotal moment in my healing journey – moments of pain, joy, sorrow, grief, love, friendship, and more can all be found in these pages. It is an important collection that I can’ wait for others to hold in their hands so that they know they are not alone. Healing is possible.

I appreciated the candid nature with which you told your story. What was the hardest thing for you to write about?

The hardest poem to write in this collection by far was “How to Build a House.” It is a poem that details decades of religious trauma, and how I’ve been trying to rebuild myself in the aftermath. The “House” that I speak of has been an ongoing work in progress, and like the poem suggests, it’s very challenging to build a whole new world for yourself when your foundation has been based in very specific, very strict religiosity. But it is possible – my House isn’t complete, but I am working on it.

What were some themes that were important for you to explore in this book?

Oooh – so many. The critics reviews that I’ve received so far for No Unpaid Passengers have all said similar things – this isn’t a poetry collection that is just about religious trauma or family dynamics or divorce or finding love. It’s all of those things. This book seeks to explore the fullness and complexity of the human experience. There can be joy and there can be sorrow, simultaneously. I hope people see themselves in at least one of these themes.

What do you hope is one thing readers take away from your poetry collection?

If you take one thing from this collection, I hope that it will be that you are not alone. When we go through grief or pain or trauma, it can feel isolating. But we are all more alike than we are different. I hope you find your community and your healing. And I’m grateful if this book can be part of it.

Author Links: GoodReads | Twitter | Facebook | Website

No Unpaid Passengers is an exploration of what it means to truly live the decision to “choose yourself.” Told through a collection of poems, Johnson Davis explores themes such as childhood trauma, divorce, Blackness, church politics, and more in these heartfelt pieces. This body of work imagines the first three decades of the author’s life as a long train ride where she takes readers on a journey from thought to thought and memory to memory while letting the people, places, and things that have been extra baggage off at various stops along the way.

This book is “PG-13” and contains some adult language. Some of the aforementioned themes may be sensitive for certain audiences. There are also themes of joy, friendship, love, home, flowers, and butterflies. Enjoy the ride!

No Unpaid Passengers

No Unpaid Passengers is an emotionally riveting collection of poems written by author Pam R. Johnson Davis. The collection is organized into six sections: I: Unpaid Pain, II: The Next Stop, III: Alone on the Night Train, IV: Love on the Ride, V: End of the Line, and VI: Afterword: Anybody Can Write a Poem (Or How Rejection Turned into a TED Talk). Serious themes such as racism, assault, divorce, and religion intermingle with themes of love, friendship, joy, home, and beauty to take readers on an incredibly raw and relatable journey.

Author Pam Johnson Davis does an incredible job of telling a story that touches everyone in some way. Davis plays into expectations with her use of slang and familiar language, using those devices to bring to life personal experiences and paint clear pictures of real-life situations that readers can relate to. Through those grounding narratives, Davis can so effectively tackle less tangible themes of love, loss, betrayal, grief, hope, and joy. Through her own experiences with marriage and divorce, Davis leads readers to question their ideas of relationships, commitment, and love. Through her experiences as a black person, a woman, and a member of the church, Davis brings up ideas about religion, trauma, sexism, racism, determination, optimism, and acceptance, both of self and others. Following this pattern, No Unpaid Passengers is able to operate as a book of revelation, showing readers the pervasive connectivity of the human experience: what you go through, someone else has gone through, and what you feel, someone else has felt.

I highly recommend this collection of raw beauty and vulnerability, in which Davis depicts her experiences. She writes not as an individual but as a representative of the human experience, providing an opportunity to connect both with the unfamiliar outside of ourselves and that which hides within.

No Unpaid Passengers is an emotional collection of poetry that takes readers on a journey through human experiences in a way that will stay with them long after they put the book down. These poems will leave readers feeling everything from one end of the spectrum to the other, a true representation of life, the joys, and the sorrows.

Pages: 90 | ASIN : B0BC5NXXXS

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Truth and Vulnerability Inspires Me

Pam R. Johnson Davis
Pam R. Johnson Davis Author Interview

Seasons (I’ll Be Seeing You) is a collection of poems exploring heartbreak and healing. What inspires you to write poetry?

Truth and vulnerability inspires me to write poetry. I turn to poetry when I feel pain and joy and love and disappointment and hope and fear and peace. When it’s me and my poetry journal, I can be my authentic self without fear of judgement. Writing “seasons II’ll be Seeing You)” and then publishing it has been the ultimate act of releasing fear and allowing my poetry to have a life of its own. I will always value and cherish that ♥

My favorite poem from the collection is ‘I Still Believe’. Do you have a favorite poem from your book?

Yes! That one brings me a lot of joy, thank you for sharing that it’s your favorite! Hmmm…for me, it’s difficult to pick a favorite because they all mean so much to me. But if I had to name one that I continue to go back to on a regular basis, it would have to be the poem, “Finally.”

What are some literary devices you are fond of using in your poetry?

Ooof – I love this question! I am a big fan of enjambment and refrains. Alliteration is something I’ve been experimenting with more lately, as well, which has been a lot of fun.

What do you hope is one thing readers take away from your poetry?

When a reader puts down my book, I want them to feel hope. Hope that they are not alone in their circumstances. Hope that there is light on the other side of darkness. That would be the most meaningful thing a reader can take away from my poetry.

Author Links: GoodReads | Instagram | Facebook | Twitter | Website

“Seasons (I’ll Be Seeing You)” is a collection of poems about healing from heartbreak, racism, and depression and follows the author’s path to embracing the fullness of her humanity. These poignant, heartfelt pieces were written by author Pam R. Johnson Davis as she navigated divorce, homelessness, and loss between 2013 and 2020. This collection debuted at on Amazon’s New Releases on Women’s Poetry and African-American Poetry and won the Best Urban Poetry Award at American Book Fest in August 2020.

Seasons (I’ll Be Seeing You): A collection of poems about heartbreak, healing, and redemption

Pam R. Johnson Davis exhibits an amazing amount of strength of both spirit and character in her anthology, Seasons: (I’ll Be Seeing You). Davis touches on all of life’s losses and victories via her collection of poems. She reaches into some dark places and shows readers exactly how far she has been able to climb and how her spirit has recovered.

Seasons: (I’ll Be Seeing You), by Pam R. Johnson Davis is an intense look at the author’s life experiences through poignant poems that are sometimes strikingly honest. While she forewarns readers about the dark places she sometimes visits with her work, there is a refreshing and uplifting side to her work as well. Readers will be taken on a beautiful ride of self-discovery through each of Davis’s poems. Her poems flow smoothly and easily off the tongue and make for lovely read alouds. Davis’s visual pauses are well-placed and serve to drive home the idea that she, and all of her readers, can overcome any obstacle.

I love poetry that pushes the limits and creates strong feelings. Davis’s work does that and more. The poems in Davis’s anthology have all the impact of the rising action and climax of a full-fledged novel. We, as readers, are afforded the opportunity to watch the poet build her way up from a truly dark place and reach again for the stars. I highly recommend Davis’s book of poetry to anyone looking for a quick relatable read or needing words of inspiration. Seasons: (I’ll Be Seeing You), by Pam R. Johnson is an emotionally charged collection of thought-provoking poetry.

Pages: 68 | ASIN: B08B84QS71

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