Crisler's literary work includes poetry, young adult fiction, and chapbooks. His publications have received national awards and nominations.[6]
Crisler has described his work as an "urban Midwestern sensibility" (uMS), "the community and creativity of the varied relationships of descendants from the first through second waves of the southern migration, exploring their connections to place/environment, history, family, and self."[1][7]
| Title | Type | Notes |
| Doing Drive-Bys on How to Love in the Midwest |
Poetry collection |
Winner of the 2022 C&R Press Award for Poetry |
| Indiana Nocturnes: Our Rural and Urban Patchwork |
Poetry collection |
Co-authored with Kevin McKelvey |
| THe GReY aLBuM [PoeMS] |
Poetry collection |
Winner of a Steel Toe Books Open Reading Period Prize[1] |
| Don’t Moan So Much (Stevie): A Poetry Musiquarium |
Poetry collection |
— |
| Pulling Scabs |
Poetry collection |
Nominated for a Pushcart Prize |
| Tough Boy Sonatas |
Poetry collection |
Nominated for the Eliot Rosewater Award (2009)[8] |
| ’This’ Ameri-can-ah |
Poetry collection |
Eric Hoffer Award nominee |
| Black Achilles |
Chapbook |
Eric Hoffer Award nominee |
| Soundtrack to Latchkey Boy |
Chapbook |
— |
| Spill |
Chapbook |
Winner of the 2008 Keyhole Chapbook Award |
| Wonderkind |
Chapbook |
Nominated for a Pushcart Prize |
| Burnt Offering of a City |
Chapbook |
Winner of the Kathy Young Chapbook Award[1] |
- RHINO Founder's Prize (2021), for Fifty Something Years of Letters Laters[9]
- The Sterling Plumpp First Voices Poetry Award[1]
- Jessie Redmon Fauset Book Award (nominated)[1]
Crisler's writing has appeared in literary journals including African American Review, Crab Orchard Review, and Belt Magazine.[6][10]
Crisler is the creator of the sonastic, a poetic form he describes as combining elements of ekphrastic poetry and persona poetry.[11] He is also the creator of the Indiana Chitlin Circuit, a Fort Wayne-based writing circuit.[1]
Crisler was named Indiana's eighth official poet laureate in January 2024 by unanimous decision. He succeeded George Kalamaras.[12]
As poet laureate, he has conducted statewide outreach through readings, workshops, and educational programs and has participated in the Indiana Authors Awards Speaker Program.[13][6]