The Wickedest
Brother Brontë
Books

savings time

9780374615796 fc
Paperback, MCD × FSG, 2025
Releases 02/04/25

The Bronx born activist and poet Roya Marsh returns with a riveting exploration of Black joy, collective action, and healing.


what will come of what you leave behind?

do you

remember that time

you survived?


The poems in Roya Marsh’s second collection, savings time, wear their raw feeling and revolutionary forcefulness on their sleeves. Alternating between confrontation and celebration, Marsh trains her unsparing eye on the twinned subjects of Black rage and Black healing with practiced, musical intention.


In poems flitting between breathless prose and measured lyricism, Marsh contemplates the contradictions and challenges of Black life in America, tackling everything from police brutality and urban gentrification to queer identity, presidential elections, and pop culture, all while calling for a world where self-care, especially for Black women, is not just encouraged but mandated. “no one told the Black girl,” she writes, “‘see you later’ was a prayer / begging us survive our own erasure.”


As unforgettable on the page as when recited in Marsh’s legendary spoken-word performances, the poems in savings time are focused on both revolution and self-love, at once holding society accountable for its exploitation of Black life and honoring the joy of persisting nonetheless.

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  • "In savings time, Roya Marsh sharpens her words like a razor, cutting through the layers of identity, trauma, and defiance with a voice that is as relentless as it is tender. These poems are not just read but felt, each one a visceral reminder of the ongoing struggle to exist fully in a world that too often attempts to erase you. Marsh's poetry collection is a fierce, unapologetic and bluesy anthem for anyone who’s ever been told they’re too much or not enough."


    —Frederick Joseph, National Bestselling Author of We Alive, Beloved

  • “In a world of too much curation that desperately clings to performative patterns and homogeneous hashtags, Roya Marsh’s savings time is your beloved, your breaking heart, your own mirror gently beckoning you out of every useless façade of restraint or good behavior and back into the light of all that still lingers. Roya’s poems remind us of what these poems can do: uncover, un-shame, and unbury.”


    —Candice Iloh, author of Salt the Water

  • "If you point me in the direction of the nearest church

    I'd run inside and scream Roya Marsh's name.


    For if God saves her,

    she will save us.


    She is not writing for the sake of poetry,

    But for the sake of our souls."

    —Jasmine Mans, author of Black Girl, Call Home

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