A poet’s debut essay collection exploring American faults through the eyes of a Dominican American In Traveling Freely: Essays , Roberto Carlos Garcia explores intersecting topics such as race, identity, American socioeconomic inequality, police violence, our inability to partake in our culture as innocents, and our complicity as Americans in all that’s wrong with the United States from the author’s specific vantage point as a Black Dominican American man. The voice in these essays is both clear and nuanced, and as readers move through the collection, the various themes cohere into a multilayered investigation of institutional racism and the inherent exploitations of capitalism. In essays that are uniquely straightforward and accessible, Garcia insists that in order to resist state-sanctioned violence against marginalized bodies and populations, we must understand our shared history of oppression—so that we can rise against it effectively and find new paths forward. “In this collection, Garcia’s voice comes through as a public intellectual who is theoretically, practically, and personally engaged.” ― World Literature Today “Garcia walks through the world as a poet, seeing the invisible aspects of the human condition that he writes with familiarity and integrity. Reporting from the inside, not the outside, the poetic voice within these essays simply sings.” ―Randall Horton, author of Dead Weight "Reading Traveling Freely , is exactly like the joy of reading James Baldwin for the very first time. Here is an important AfroLatinx voice illuminating valuable insights for not only understanding global race politics, but also for obtaining concrete counsel on what we can all do wherever we are. Like Baldwin, Roberto Carlos Garcia does this labor of love with the elegance of a poet that can both inform and transform us."—Tanya Kateri Hernandez, author of Racial Innocence: Unmasking Latino Anti-Black Bias and the Struggle for Equality ROBERTO CARLOS GARCIA is the author of several books, including What Can I Tell You? Selected Poems, as well as the founder of Get Fresh Books Publishing, a literary nonprofit. The recipient of a 2023 fellowship from the New Jersey State Council on the Arts, he writes about the Afro-Latinx and Afro-diasporic experience. His work has been published in Poetry Magazine , NACLA, The Root , Poets & Writers , and the anthology BreakBeat Poets Vol. 4: LatiNext , among others.