The smallest mistake we call human
Isaac Pickell writes from the middle of things: the tensions between Blackness and Jewishness, between loss and inheritance, between being seen and being claimed. But these poems don’t search for wholeness so much as they honor the seams—the complicated, unresolved places that keep our lives together.

Grief runs through. Much of it is personal: parents aging, partners wavering, friends dying, old selves discarded. But some of it is inherited—grief for everything America never let become possible, for the history that shaped us but won’t hold us, for language that never quite fits. Haunted by economics like redlining, eviction, and scarcity, the book also confronts the grief of precarity.

This is not a book of coming to terms, it’s a book that sits beside you while you try to live with what you know. It asks how we carry loss, how we recognize love, and how we move forward when we’re still not sure where we stand. The smallest mistake we call human is a sharp, tender meditation on identity, family, and the contradictions that make us.
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The smallest mistake we call human
Isaac Pickell writes from the middle of things: the tensions between Blackness and Jewishness, between loss and inheritance, between being seen and being claimed. But these poems don’t search for wholeness so much as they honor the seams—the complicated, unresolved places that keep our lives together.

Grief runs through. Much of it is personal: parents aging, partners wavering, friends dying, old selves discarded. But some of it is inherited—grief for everything America never let become possible, for the history that shaped us but won’t hold us, for language that never quite fits. Haunted by economics like redlining, eviction, and scarcity, the book also confronts the grief of precarity.

This is not a book of coming to terms, it’s a book that sits beside you while you try to live with what you know. It asks how we carry loss, how we recognize love, and how we move forward when we’re still not sure where we stand. The smallest mistake we call human is a sharp, tender meditation on identity, family, and the contradictions that make us.
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The smallest mistake we call human

The smallest mistake we call human

by Isaac Pickell
The smallest mistake we call human

The smallest mistake we call human

by Isaac Pickell

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$17.95 
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    Available for Pre-Order. This item will be released on August 18, 2026

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Overview

Isaac Pickell writes from the middle of things: the tensions between Blackness and Jewishness, between loss and inheritance, between being seen and being claimed. But these poems don’t search for wholeness so much as they honor the seams—the complicated, unresolved places that keep our lives together.

Grief runs through. Much of it is personal: parents aging, partners wavering, friends dying, old selves discarded. But some of it is inherited—grief for everything America never let become possible, for the history that shaped us but won’t hold us, for language that never quite fits. Haunted by economics like redlining, eviction, and scarcity, the book also confronts the grief of precarity.

This is not a book of coming to terms, it’s a book that sits beside you while you try to live with what you know. It asks how we carry loss, how we recognize love, and how we move forward when we’re still not sure where we stand. The smallest mistake we call human is a sharp, tender meditation on identity, family, and the contradictions that make us.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781625572264
Publisher: Black Lawrence Press
Publication date: 08/18/2026
Pages: 70
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.50(h) x (d)

About the Author

Isaac Pickell is a Black and Jewish poet, PhD student, and adjunct instructor in Detroit, Michigan. A Cave Canem Fellow and graduate of Miami University’ s Creative Writing MFA, he is the author of The smallest mistake we call human, It’ s not over once you figure it out, and two chapbooks. Isaac has taken a seat in all fifty states and has so much to look forward to.

Table of Contents

One
Everybody Black
It’ s a real fucked up time to be Black and Jewish
An hour after Auschwitz I tasted the perfect pierogi
Inviolable
Grandmother’ s farm and other good investments
This is a poem about rocks
Even I who was there I don’ t believe
So what if we are ash
We all hear prophecy from the canopy
You only trust safe senders
The holiday
Octoroon
White walls
From the archives
Tired
A funeral in southeast Grand Rapids
Ritual sacrifice is a lagging statistical indicator
The condition is mourning unless you got a white son

Two
The way your body forces you to pay
Poem in which I’ m avoiding visiting my mother in the hospital
Ars poetica as a hospital window
Zinnias
Secondhand
When your mother loses another apartment
I visit my parents’ house and all I see is evergreen
You visit your parents’ house and all you see is dust
Character study
It’ s passé to put cigarettes in a poem, but all I ever do is smoke
The golden years of incremental change
Instead of saying the word apartheid
Imperfection & other promises
When you have to remind me to do the dishes

Three
I am deeply broken in a breaking world
I try to tell you who I am
Synesthesia
Good omens
Beautiful poem
The sound of you and I saving the world
It was the animals
To be the shameless crows, or: listening to the news
Sonnets for when you’ re expecting the end of the world
At your funeral, I hang onto the present tense
This poem has no title because I don’ t know what happens after you die
Some dreams for the end of the world
Diagnostics
Poetry should stay out of the self-help business
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