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Elegy for a broken world and all it--we--might still become.
Love Like a Body Carried to Shore, from award-winning poet Abigail Chabitnoy, is an invitation to listen. This ecologically and emotionally charged collection explores continuity through water and weather, through the intimacies of relation, where knowing is a bodied verb. Moving with a tidal rhythm across its unsectioned form, the book weaves ancestral memory with myth. It stays with the work of environmental witness and extends its meditation to the permeability between human and animal. Domestic spaces blur with the mythic. The self emerges inside the landscape.
Engaging Indigenous and Judeo-Christian cosmologies, Chabitnoy reconfigures these frames into openings toward mutuality. Amid ecological and cultural precarity, the poems enact reclamation, seeking moments outside of causal time, where future catastrophe loosens its hold long enough for the body to remember what it is to love the world and be loved by it.
[sample poem]
NOT A DRILL
The berries were not
ripe we plucked and
burst on our tongues.
We bent low to thumb
each foreign body that
opened
held our breath to
record erratics
glissading
from the mountains we
left standing
the sigh of icemelts
the rust we smelled
already monument.
It was love we
pressed our fingers
through
the honeyed fungus
love we let the
shallow rooted
spruce stand
where no one had need
love we sang to
chase the bears
from the
brush
we projected
on the iceberg
when the dark was
sufficient
love we refrained
from throwing
stones at the
muddied lake.
Sea weeding
through green
it was love
we did not pluck
the unsightly
growth from the
supple
earth.
ABIGAIL CHABITNOY is the author of In the Current Where Drowning Is Beautiful (Wesleyan 2022), the lino-cut illustrated chapbook Converging Lines of Light (Flower Press 2020), and How to Dress a Fish (Wesleyan 2019), winner of the 2020 Colorado Book Award for Poetry and shortlisted in the international category of the 2020 Griffin Prize for Poetry. Abigail is a mentor for the Institute of American Indian Arts MFA in Creative Writing and an assistant professor at UMass Amherst. She is a Koniag descendant and member of the Tangirnaq Native Village in Kodiak.
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