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Winter of Worship

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Steeped in loss—of climate and childhood, of fathers and friends—Winter of Worship finds survival in our tender human connections.

Told through an ever-queer lens, Kayleb Rae Candrilli's fourth collection, Winter of Worship, is a patchwork of the pastoral and the "litter swirled around us"—a pandemic, global warming, a hometown hit by storms of fentanyl and Oxycontin scripts. A book of elegy told in ghazals, "Marble Runs," and other forms, these poems reckon with loss: of climate, of fathers, of youth. Candrilli writes, "We are so young / to know so much about life without / our friends." Steeped in the grief of these losses, Winter of Worship finds healing in the smallest memories: Nokia phone cases, jalapeño gardens, pop flys, 67 Dodge darts, YouTube mixes "all electronica and / glitch step." We also find survival in our tender human connections: an iPod tucked into the jacket pocket of a drifter, a kiss pressed to a partner's forehead, a mother calling her child by their chosen name. From the cornfields of Pennsylvania to the streets of downtown Brooklyn, these poems refuse to forget, refuse to lose "an ounce of gentleness."

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    • Booklist

      December 1, 2024
      Whiting Award-winning Candrilli (Water I Won't Touch, 2021) commits to what the title of their new collection implies as they explore the implications of time and seasons. The poems illuminate experiences that are sometimes divine, often devastating, frequently mundane, and singularly perfect. In the opening poem, "From Above," there are clues to what follows: "It's a new year, and each oyster I open re-injures / my two-seam shoulder, my curveball bones." The speaker--queer, trans, and possessing a remarkable lyric clarity--points to the cumulative effect of living and all that a body carries. "Who knows what becomes of hurt / when it no longer hurts," they write. The hurt encompasses grief in all forms and is offered for dead friends, the climate crisis, generational trauma, and past selves ignored or rejected. However, the work also evokes the joys of youth, connection, new love, and the music that frames it all. These are poems constructed with a quiet power that produces a revelatory end that somehow cracks open another beginning, "Not everyone understands my body, but still, it's here, & believable."

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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