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After the Body

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After the Body charts the depredations of an illness that seems intent on removing the body, piece by piece.
  • 07 July 2020
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From her first book, Aerial View of Louisiana, published in 1979, Cleopatra Mathis has given us poems that somehow manage to be elegant and visceral at once. What has changed in the progression of the six collections since then—in poetry addressing marriage, the mystery of animals, the delicate and indelible bonds of family, illness, and mortality—is that the visceral quotient has steadily increased, though the elegance remains undiminished. For Mathis, the natural world no longer provides the affirmation and solace it once did; the navigation of a darkened hallway at night is a perilous expedition. After the Body charts the depredations of an illness that seems intent on removing the body, piece by piece. Through close and relentless observation of her own physical being, Mathis shows us how miniscule ambition, planning, and a sense of control over our own bodies are—things we so blithely take as real and solid when healthy. Her many publications, awards, and praise from peers testify that she is a lyric poet of the highest order. This expansive new book reflects a brilliant career, and is a necessary addition to any collection.
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Price: $17.95
Pages: 160
Publisher: Sarabande Books
Imprint: Sarabande Books
Publication Date: 07 July 2020
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781946448606
Format: Paperback
BISACs: POETRY / Women Authors, POETRY / Subjects & Themes / Animals & Nature, POETRY / Subjects & Themes / Death, Grief, Loss
REVIEWS Icon
Eric Hoffer da Vinci Eye winner
New England Book Awards Finalist
"Must-Read Poetry: July 2020," The Millions



"Over the last four decades, Mathis (Book of Dog) has quietly crafted lyrically precise, often harrowing poems in which the poet’s 'throat is a long avenue of ice,/ cutting the familiar good words/ at their source.' This generous volume draws from the poet’s recorded gifts and losses: poems of early and late motherhood, a child’s mental illness and institutionalization, human and nonhuman deaths within and beyond the poet’s purview. . . .In these knowing poems, readers may recognize their own humanity, as well as the sometimes-impossible conditions of living."
Publishers Weekly, starred review

"An excellent collection that leads with her new poems, finely attuned to the body and aging."
The Millions, “Must-Read Poetry: July 2020”

"[D]eeply moving, beautiful."
Literary North, online

"In reading this superb collection, I was often reminded of the closing of Randall Jarrell’s ‘90 North,’ a poem of doubt and regret that somehow manages to quietly triumph over its bitterness. ‘Pain comes from the darkness. / And we call it wisdom. It is pain.’ Mathis’s poems, like so many of Jarrell’s, insist that pain and wisdom are often bafflingly symbiotic: they have learned to live with this injustice, and do so with a bravery and emotional depth that is sadly rare among contemporary poets."
On the Seawall

“Beginning with her astonishing first book, Aerial View of Louisiana, in 1979, and now with her moving and poignant group of new poems, Cleopatra Mathis has surveyed and charted with ever-increasing lyric concision and dramatic intensity ‘the ritual ground work’ of human need. From book to book, Mathis demonstrates how memory extends its ‘first claim’ to include not only the mythic richness of her childhood in Louisiana but also the contrasting and complicating joy and grief of her life in New England as a transplanted Southerner. The resolute heart and keen human insights found everywhere in After the Body: New and Selected Poems renew the ‘claim’ many readers of contemporary American poetry have made for decades, that Cleopatra Mathis is one of our most important and essential poets.”
— Michael Collier
Cleopatra Mathis was born and raised in Ruston, Louisiana, and has lived in New England since 1980. She has published seven previous books of poems, most recently Book of Dog and White Sea, both from Sarabande Books. Her many awards and prizes include a Guggenheim Fellowship, two fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, and two Pushcart Prizes. Her poems have appeared widely in journals, magazines, and anthologies, including The New Yorker, Threepenny Review, The Georgia Review, Best American Poetry, and The Extraordinary Tide: Poetry by American Women. The founder of the creative writing program at Dartmouth College in 1982, she lives with her family in East Thetford, Vermont.
Table of Contents

After the Body: New Poems


This Time, the Hawk
The Difference
Bed-bound
After Chemo
Not Myself
Dyskinesia
Through the Coffin Window
Mother Pain
The News at 2 A.M.
Arm, Etc.
What the Knife Is For
Mother
Spring
Unfinished
The Year
The River
Going Under
Broke
The Old Self
The Body, Full of Bias
Being Apart
After the Body
Silver


Selected Poems

Aerial View of Louisiana (1979)


Aerial View of Louisiana
For Maria
As You Stalk the Sleep of My Forgetting
A Place of Another Name
Bees
Getting Out
Padre Island


The Bottom Land (1983)

Black Walnut
For Blue
Body, Earth, Water
Elegy for the Other
White Field
On the Twelfth of March
Fort Wall at Mytilene: Greece, 1921
Moon and Stars over Crete: For Alexandra
Lilacs
Body, Earth, Water: A Meditation


The Center for Cold Weather (1989)

Living Next Door to the Center for Cold Weather
In a White Absence
Dancer among the Constellations
Flowers
To the Unborn
A Seasonal Record
Cleopatra Theodos
August Arrival
The Faithful


Guardian (1995)

Blues: Late August
Poem for Marriage
Who Knows
The Story
Seven Months
Not Writing
The Great Quiet
Mother’s Day, 1993: Hearing That We Will Bomb Bosnia
Raptor
The Perfect Service
Earth


What to Tip the Boatman? (2001)

The Owl
Old Trick
Solstice
Noon
That Year
For Months
White Primer
Cutlery
“as if mad is a direction, like west . . .”
The Ruin
Intermediary
Reconciled
After Persephone
What to Tip the Boatman?
The Return
Persephone, Answering
Demeter the Pilgrim
Figure of Formal Loss: Pearl
Fist


White Sea (2005)

Salt
The Old Question
The Source
The Waiting
Catalpa
Cane
Burial
Want
Moon Snail
Death of a Gull
Speech to the Self
The Release
White Morning
You Must Cross the Black River
Praise Him
Soul


Book of Dog (2012)

Canis
Ants Want My Yellow Moth
Song of If-Only
Their Chamber
Essential Tremor
In Lent
Interstice
Noise
Book of Dog
Salt Water Ducks
Dune Shack
Alone
Western Conifer Seed Bug
Survival: A Guide