- 106 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
Coriolis
About This Book
The Coriolis effectâfrom which A. D. Lauren-Abunassar'shyperkinetic debut collectionborrows its titleâdescribes a force that deflects a mass off course. This concept is at play both formally and psychically in Coriolis, recognizedin Leila Chatti's Foreword as "a book of wanting, of lack, absence, disintegration, opacity, and yearning.... 'If only I could cut out the part of me shaped like wanting, ' writes Lauren-Abunassar. At times, the thing wanted for is love. Other times: family, certainty, belonging, home, safety, wellness, wholeness, or simply for a thing to be clean.Always, these poems reveal the shape of the want by illuminating its outline." Perhaps the speaker of these poems wants most of all to be seen, despite her reflex to deflect when she discloses a shame or trauma, often by depositing the self-revelation within rapid, teeming strings of thought. Yet as much as this speaker may be an introvert in lifeâ"Every time someone says my name it surprises me"; "Because I am lonely, I am always shying away from the mirror"; "Today I woke up feeling / like an already said thing"âmany of her utterances are exuberantly uninhibited. "Small trees live inside me, " Lauren-Abunassar admits passingly in one poem. And in another: "When I dream of myself, my mouth / blooms many hands. They reach in all / shapes and directions."
Frequently asked questions
Information
Table of contents
- Cover Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Foreword
- Acknowledgments
- Something I Wrote Down
- I.
- II.
- III.
- Notes