succubus in my pocket by kari edwards
(EOAGH, Brooklyn, 2015)
(EOAGH, Brooklyn, 2015)
My dog Athena is dying. Not dying in the sense that we’re
all dying but, quite specifically: she is dying and it will be a premature
death. It will be as premature, I feel, as both of yours. The prematureness is
significant—we will all die, but yours, like Athena’s, seem to be deaths out of
sync with the lives that were supposed to unfold. Or perhaps not—but this dismay must exist initially in a flawed someone who loved you both.
My dog Athena is dying from a fungal disease. She is three
years old. There is, as I write this, no known cure though we intervened more
than any other human family has done for a dog so that, hopefully, her
experience will add to the body of knowledge required for discovering a cure
someday. I’m going on too long about Athena,
here, because it hurts to address the specificities of your two deaths.
My dog Athena is dying from a fungal disease that has
spooked her doctors. When we brought her to the hospital, the doctors said she
was the known third incident of such a disease brought to their hospital. But since seeing Athena,
they now see a case every other day, “and the cases are accelerating.” Thus, my
husband Tom has a theory: Athena is dying prematurely because of climate
change. Warm weather increases the pathogens in the air and such has affected
Athena—what she’s drawn into her body with each breath. Since Tom expressed his
belief, I went online and, yes, there does seem sufficient research now to
affirm his thoughts. For instance,
“climate warming tends to favor
the geographic expansion of several infectious diseases. … Overall, climate
conditions constrain the geographic and seasonal distributions of infectious
diseases, and weather affects the timing and intensity of disease outbreaks…”
--ScienceDirect (a related article HERE)
--ScienceDirect (a related article HERE)
Well there you go—the personal is the universal and vice versa, the body
is the world and vice versa, to damage environment is to hurt the very flesh it’s supposed to
be “around”, and I see you both—Dear kari, Dear Marthe—in your respective
wisdoms nodding.
After you passed, Dear kari, I ordered your book succubus in my pocket. But this 2015
posthumous release from EOAGH remained on my desk, unread, for the past three
years. It stayed on my desk, always inches from my fingers, but remained
unread. It was too painful to open what would be another confirmation that you
had passed.
But then, Dear Marthe, you passed. You passed just days
before I had ordered a review copy from above/ground press of your chapbook, coastal geometries. It arrived after your death. I
haven’t yet opened it.
But your premature passing, Dear Marthe, turned my fingers towards
kari’s book. Because of you, Dear
Marthe, I’ve begun to read kari’s book. I turned away from pain to another pain
that time made incrementally more bearable. Thank you, Dear Marthe: kari’s book
is a masterpiece. You can see the very physicality of its energy just from its
first page:
(click on all images to enlarge)
Perhaps kari’s succubus
in my pocket might become some “niche” read (due to its subject
matter, due to the vagaries of publishing and its initial presence through a
“small press”, due to the e-world’s short memories, and so on). If so, this
fate is clearly temporary—it does not belong in some “underground.” kari’s
words will muscle themselves out onto the larger universe as kari achieved
something that compelling. Here’s some
sample pages from the book, chosen by opening it at random:
Rob Halpern provides an absolutely luscious introduction,
Dear kari, to your words. Here’s an excerpt that I cite so that I don’t lapse
to a pretend-objectivity in, for purpose of a “review,” attempting to analyze
your words:
Thank you, Rob Halpern. I now can continue reading you, Dear
kari, by not passively looking at your words but swimming in the spaces between
them, then touching out to feel (nay caress) the words every time I’m moved to
do so, and I’m often moved to do so because they are palpable. And they are convincing
… and convincingly-beautiful. Here’s another sample for those reading me feeling
you:
With your death, Dear kari, you continue to trouble habitual life stories. You’ve
always wanted to be read but not be a consumable read in the manner of
capitalism. Because your words are compelling, as also affirmed by Trace Peterson’s moving Foreword, you will always be read even if it
takes more readers three years or more to come to your stories.
And, Dear Marthe, someday I will read you again … past the
initial hurt of your premature transition. I do miss you.
(on my desk)
Love,
Eileen
*****
Eileen Tabios is the editor of Galatea Resurrects (GR). She loves books and has released over 50 collections of poetry, fiction, essays, and experimental biographies from publishers in nine countries and cyberspace. Her 2018 poetry collections include HIRAETH: Tercets From the Last Archipelago, MURDER DEATH RESURRECTION: A Poetry Generator, TANKA: Vol. 1, and ONE TWO THREE: Selected Hay(na)ku Poems which is a bilingual English-Spanish edition with translator Rebeka Lembo. She is the inventor of the poetry form “hay(na)ku” which will be the focus of a 15-year anniversary celebration at the San Francisco and Saint Helena Public Libraries in 2018. She also will edit three anthologies in 2018: Menopausal Hay(na)ku for P-Grubbers, HAY(NA)KU 15, and HUMANITY. More information is available at http://eileenrtabios.com.