Skip to product information
1 of 1

Self-Portrait as the "i" in Florida

Regular price $17.95
Regular price $0.00 Sale price $17.95
Sold out
". . . formally various and deliciously propulsive." —Kaveh AkbarA love letter to Miami and a meditation on fatherhood, Self-Portrait as the “i” in Florida paints a vivid picture of contemporary So...
Read More
  • 07 April 2026
View Product Details
". . . formally various and deliciously propulsive." —Kaveh Akbar

A love letter to Miami and a meditation on fatherhood, Self-Portrait as the “i” in Florida paints a vivid picture of contemporary South Florida in all its contradictions and beauty. 

Selected by Major Jackson as the winner of the Donald Justice Poetry Prize, Cunningham’s second collection weaves together ecological and familial landscapes, capturing both the spectacle—burning sugarcane fields, snake farms, chaotic highways—and the daily rituals that bind a family: school drop-offs, sick days, and small kindnesses. Blending formalist and free verse, the book becomes both an inquiry into belonging and a celebration of the essential everyday moments that define a life. 

At once panoramic and deeply personal, Cunningham writes with a documentarian’s eye and a father’s heart.

files/i.png Icon
Price: $17.95
Pages: 94
Publisher: Autumn House Press
Imprint: Autumn House Press
Series: Donald Justice Poetry Prize
Publication Date: 07 April 2026
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781637681183
Format: Paperback
BISACs: POETRY / Subjects & Themes / Places, Modern and contemporary poetry / poems, POETRY / Subjects & Themes / Family, POETRY / Subjects & Themes / Animals & Nature, POETRY / American / General, Poetry / poems by form or style, Narrative theme: sense of place
REVIEWS Icon
"The delightful sophomore outing from Cunningham celebrates South Florida in all its glory and contradictions. The poems address themes of community and belonging with wry insight." Publishers Weekly

"The collection is an overall success from a writer who’s unafraid to have fun by embracing the contradictions of a place he loves. To read it is to experience not only the beauty of the overgrown Floridian countryside but some lovely human truths—and to do so through the eyes of Cunningham is nothing if not a pleasure." —Barrelhouse Magazine

"What's remarkable about P. Scott Cunningham's Self-Portrait as the 'i' in Florida is—well, actually, the whole thing is pretty remarkable. But what will stay with me, and what fills me with the desire to buy copies of this book to wallpaper the homes of every CEO and politician and also everyone I love or have ever loved or might some day love, is Cunningham's prodigious sense of scope and stakes. This is a book of love poems to specific—often named—beloveds: a wife, three young children, the moon, Miami. But it's also a book about the agony of desperately loving a world past the precipice of irreversible ecological collapse, the pulverizing reality of not being able to give your children a healthier planet, a safer world. Humor isn't a deflection here. As with all poetry's great wits—Parker, O'Hara, Ritvo—it is because Cunningham makes us laugh that he can also make us weep. Florida is so deftly choreographed, so formally various and deliciously propulsive, that I read it in one happy blink, then immediately spent a weekend poring over it slowly, with frankly obscene relish and awe. I sit at its feet."—Kaveh Akbar, author of Pilgrim Bell

“What we understand of Florida, adduced by popular culture, tourist visits to theme parks, social media memes, lacks in comparison to the intimate and gorgeous portrayal of The Sunshine State as an inescapable muse in Self-Portrait as the ‘i’ in Florida. Its yard sprinklers, roadside stands, billboards, laundromats, furniture stores, bars, and bays become magic fodder like glittering sparks of sun off its long coast. Yet, Cunningham’s sense of whimsy, delight, and literariness never overpower poignant acknowledgement of Florida’s melancholic edges; such aesthetic balancing is delicate yet perforce its own expeditions of language and image-making: ‘Ashes fall around me like pieces of the moon’ and ‘Flip me, un-season me, soak me / in your broken bottles / your spilled colognes.’ In this poet's eyes, beauty and kitsch are gloved hand in hand. What is spun from here is the humid, placid calm that follows afternoon storms, poems about soft rock mixes, yachts, and other curiosities that stretch us to feel this poet's uncompromising sense of place. Somehow Cunningham sustains a sly humor throughout, and his pitched lyricism and narrative acts arrive in waves. To our enrichment, Florida is praised, moved inside us, placed in our cultural imagination more vividly.” —Major Jackson, author of Razzle Dazzle

“The vivid hum of mosquitoes, I-95 traffic, and lawn sprinklers pulses through the pages of P. Scott Cunningham’s extraordinary Self-Portrait as the 'i' in Florida, punctuating landscapes of ocean sunsets and strip malls, mango trees and sinkholes, yachts and encroaching tides. ‘To love this state you have to divest yourself from tomorrow,’ writes Cunningham, and this book is not only an ode to the Sunshine State, with all its precarity and complications, but also to the joys and demands of the domestic. Full of humor and heart, and rooted in the material world, Cunningham’s exuberant, deftly crafted poems bless his subjects with a spiritual and emotional radiance that reminds us, even among the ruins of late-stage capitalism and climate change, we are ‘still holding / one another, still lost in the reverie / of being.’” —Erika Meitner, author of Useful Junk

P. Scott Cunningham is a poet and essayist from Boca Raton. His debut collection, Ya Te Veo (University of Arkansas, 2018), was selected by Billy Collins for the Miller Williams Poetry Series. His poems, essays, and translations have appeared in The Nation, American Poetry Review, Harvard Review, and others. He is the editor of Eight Miami Poets (Jai Alai, 2014), a mini-anthology of Miami poets, and Ballerz 2K20 (O, Miami, 2021), a zine of basketball poems, as well as the creator and series editor of The Miami Trilogy, three anthologies of Miami writers that address issues critical to their communities. He is a graduate of Wesleyan University and the founder of O, Miami, a nonprofit dedicated to amplifying the poetry of Miamians. He lives with his children and his wife, the writer Christina Frigo, in Illinois.