Andrea Rexilius You were always so hungry,
or cold. Nearly a ghost.
Still, everyone will say
what was it like to lose a sister.
What was it like to see her body
embalmed within church walls
in your hometown.
âAndrea Rexiliusâs visionary requiem for her sister spears like broken glass through the palm, emancipating us from Cartesian solitude and into the holy space of conjoined mortalities. Her lyricism crafts a cathedral to house both the heaven our bodies were and the hells the flesh must endure. Here, memories hunt for their other half in forms now mourned, and, in death, ripened into meadowlark and tree branch. Here, we learn to read from the compendium of the beasts and their communal worlding. Here, Rexilius excavates language to our human foundations, illuminating the self we made through the other: and we are colony, the hive and the flock. Andrea Rexiliusâs brilliant Sister Urn presses us against the afterlife, and, in radiant revelations, achieves, as if in living diorama, the body as an epistle of love.â âJ. Michael Martinez, author of Museum of the Americas
âTo call a work âpoignantâ is to say its needle has pierced you, that you may touch the needle quick at work as it restitches whatâs split or frayed. Sister Urn wounds me like this. At the center we find: traces of a sister, animal dioramas, feathers, stray threads, evidence of the anthropocene. A calm, unflinching clarity lights this work that glimmers with Rexiliusâ swift and bewitched imagination wielding a power to transform words before our eyes, as hem turns to hymn to hemoglobin to hemisphere. Rexilius leads us into that hemisphere long darkened by despair while holding the small illuminations of this music: âWe blank our voices / going forward into the night. Uvula as lantern.â â âCarolina Ebeid, author of You Ask Me To Talk About the Interior
Genres:
Poetry
58 Pages