Sophie Robinsons first full-length collection features material from an impressive gathering of writers and artists (including foreword and afterword by poets Caroline Bergvall and Diane Ward, respectively) as well as formal elements recalling others (Gertrude Stein, photographer Francesca Woodman), creating a reading experience that feels both peculiarly allusive and particular. In Interior, the books first section, the pairing of object (e.g., KNEE-LENGTH POLKA DOT SOCK) and non-referential description (My shoulder playful and turned away toward the lake / between your knees) is an obvious nod to the experimentation of Steins Tender Buttons. While some of the pairings can be overly abstract, each leaves a clear impressionof absence: FINE-TOOTHED COMB W/HANDLE is defined as My obtuse love left behind, MAROON LEGWARMER, as Where are you gone quick and cruel. What is explored, then, is the ephemeral nature of presence rather than the validation of a solid object through accurate definition. Given this, it is unsurprising that a draws upon Woodmans work, which also explores how we are haunted by what is absent. The titles of as three sectionsInterior, Geometries, and Disorderare taken from Woodmans Some Disordered Interior Geometries, and Robinson includes several of Woodmans images in Disorder, whose collaged visual and textual elements might have benefited from a clearer reproduction. If the books dedication and foreword draw attention to personal loss, Robinson has emphasized elsewhere that a explores the concepts of death, mourning and loss [rather] than [the] account of my personal experience of those things. as language articulates mourning less through hyperbolic personal account and more through hyperbolized language: Losses what we losses remember losses all over / losses ourselves. Geometries, the second and least allusive part of the book, wonderfully shapes the emotions of rage and grief through loose sonnets, written in a rapid, feverish language: Beauty is nothing is nothing is a / gently disgusting residue of all / that burps and smiles. Although a borders on elegy, it retains an elusive elegance beyond the reach of categorization.
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Cristiana Baik is an editor at Tarpaulin Sky and graduate of the University of Alabama M.F.A. program in creative writing. Her work has been published in RealPoetik, Black Dress Press, Jacket, and elsewhere.
Tara Neelakantappa Safronoff, The All-Purpose Magical Tent microreview,
James Shea, Star in the Eye microreview