Error loading page.
Try refreshing the page. If that doesn't work, there may be a network issue, and you can use our self test page to see what's preventing the page from loading.
Learn more about possible network issues or contact support for more help.

Lying In

Poems

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A devastating, vulnerable collection tracing high-risk pregnancy and new motherhood amid grief.

“All my life all I’ve wanted was to be myself / and someone else,” writes Elizabeth Metzger. From the shadowy perspective of confinement, where the presence of death unsettles all outcomes, these poems examine an expansion and fracturing of the self—into motherhood as well as childhood, into past selves and future unknowns. The child becomes parent, the parent becomes child, the child arrives but in doing so is lost. New loss haunts new life, and life becomes “one or two lives.” The door is more valuable than the prize behind it.

With ambivalence as well as deep feeling, Metzger wonders how a single body can be expected to hold both immense joy and immense mourning, profound longing and creeping numbness, when one so often overtakes the other. She plunges into the darkness inside—of the gloomy room, the inner body, the afterlife and the pre-language mind—and sends back “a searchlight across the underworld,” Eurydice in search of herself.

Aching and contemplative, Lying In is an exquisite portrait of an in-between time—and of the person who emerges on the other side. “Isn’t it obvious how we’ve changed?”

  • Creators

  • Publisher

  • Release date

  • Formats

  • Languages

  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 29, 2023
      In her searching second collection, Metzger (The Spirit Papers) investigates the unknowable mystery of what it means to be alive, even when life is filled with questions that seem to have no answer. “All my life all I’ve wanted was to be myself/ and someone else,” she writes. That sense of doubleness pervades these pages, which are about selfhood and motherhood, and the responsibility individuals have for their own lives and the lives of those they love, as in the poem “Lying In”: “Before I knew I was in danger/ I did not get up. After,/ when I say how long I lay down/ how can I make you understand it was an order?” These pieces make clear the author’s “sapling doubt” in this “one-room world” as Metzger beautifully, critically, and tenderly weaves life, loss, and love into one, revealing their inextricability in the “voluntary nature of staying alive.” Reminding readers that the “wasted life still carries a self through it,” these honest poems of witness reckon with confusion and heartache.

Formats

  • Kindle Book
  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

subjects

Languages

  • English

Loading