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Box (price includes shipping)
FOR INTERNATIONAL ORDERS (Canada included): Please email Two Sylvias Press ([email protected]) listing the item(s) you would like to order and quantity. We will send you an invoice with the international shipping amount.
*by Sue D. Burton (Two Sylvias Press, 2018)
Box is the winner of the 2017 Two Sylvias Press Poetry Prize judged by Diane Seuss
2nd Place Winner for the Foreword Prize in Poetry
Praise for Box:
Let’s just get this part out of the way, Sue Burton’s Box is a brilliant, imperative, masterful collection. I envy this book; I covet and adore it. It is a book of the body and the soul, of the body as a trap for the soul, and the box—from the magician’s box, where the body is sawn in half, to the coffin—as a trap for the (female) body. It is a book of mirth and snark—with all-caps titles like “WHY I’M NOT COMING TO MY FUNERAL,” “MY NARRATIVE BENT IS BENT ON TELLING A STORY,” and “OVER AT THE SHIVA PIANO LOUNGE THE WOMAN WHO WAS SAWN IN HALF IS DRINKING A HIPSTER VARIANT (GREEN CHARTREUSE AND GIN) OF LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S 1876 ORIGINAL VEGETABLE COMPOUND”—and deadly serious intent. If the box is its defining metaphor, and the sawed-in-half-woman its central archetype, then its thematic axis is abortion, legal, illegal, botched, and died-for. Burton’s source material is the dovetailing of the holy quartet: public history, political history, family history, and apparently personal history. But this is poetry, not polemic. Its bottom line is the possibility of language within and beyond the borders of its ideas. Along with being badass and defiant and imaginative as hell, the book is formally-astute and deeply literary. There is a villanelle. There are sonnets, including a prose sonnet sequence in which each poem is shaped like—you guessed it—a box. And there is Hopkins, Dickinson, Marianne Moore, and Adrienne Rich canoodling in the same collection with a girl named Ruby, a sprite, “dressed like a man dressed like a goat…down there in the dark like Nijinsky’s faun, in a cream-colored body suit, little goat horns that nobody could see, bobby-pinned in hair that nobody could see, red-streaked and kinked.” It’s all here—story, song, and figuration, insurgence, sorrow, and love. “Once a woman sawn in half, always./Though it’s all in the eye—yours—the beholder,” she writes. I beheld. I urge you, too, to behold.
--Diane Seuss (Contest Judge)