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After Image

ebook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks

Woven from dreamlike and echoing images, After Image travels between life and death, between a living body and its absence.

A house, an orchard, "a shudder of blossoms." A fountain, a bed, a sudden spring snow. Carefully woven from a dreamlike set of images which echo and reconfigure throughout the collection, the poems in Jenny George's After Image hug the cusp between life and death, between a living body and its absence. "And in the space / left behind—" Time slips. Eurydice muses on the gestures of the living, and we look out from inside the removed head of Orpheus. The laughing gods and the furies make appearances too, and the poet's persona appears as its own character—the observing self, navigating the strangenesses of grief's terrain. Unsentimental yet pulsing with love, each cutting and transcendent poem is relentless in its willingness to see, to hold both the impossibility and inevitability of transformation. In scenes that hover between the ordinary, the imagined, and the unknowable, and with George's sly, meticulous simplicity, After Image asks what lingers in the face of death and what falls away.


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    • Library Journal

      September 20, 2024

      George's debut collection, The Dream of Reason, remains one of the more overlooked poetry projects of the past decade, a gently arcadian head nod toward Louise Gl�ck, surveying the natural world's aches, idylls, and especially animals. This sophomore effort is a more resolutely gutting affair, its title referring to the grief that clouds every experience in the aftermath of loss, the collection rife with any number of absolutely pummeling expressions of how such pain manifests: "Everywhere I looked / I saw a body's helplessness, its need to lie on the earth." George further emphasizes this sense of life interrupted by grief's insistence on the present in her use of language, certain words and images recycled and repurposed across poems--"snow" suffocates, "crows" portend, "fruit" and "spring" hope for resurrection. "Eurydice" also pointedly haunts these pages, balanced by the character "Jenny George"--those who are gone, those who remain. But as the poet confesses, George's "words are just images gleaned off a dying girl like an apple peel pared in a slow spiral off an apple." George suggests that perhaps all readers can do in the face of grief is to find the fruit in the spiral. VERDICT An emotionally devastating and formally dynamic collection, cementing that George is one of the most underrated working poets after only two collections.--Luke Gorham

      Copyright 2024 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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