Good bones

Maggie Smith, 1977-

Book - 2017

"Poems written out of the experience of motherhood, inspired by the poet watching her own children trying to read the world like a book they've just opened, knowing nothing of the characters or plot"--

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Subjects
Genres
Poetry
Published
North Adams, Massachusetts : Tupelo Press 2017.
Language
English
Main Author
Maggie Smith, 1977- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
99 pages ; 23 cm
ISBN
9781946482013
  • Weep Up
  • First Fall
  • Marked
  • Sky
  • This Town
  • Twentieth Century
  • The Hawk
  • London Plane
  • Accidental Pastoral
  • Museum
  • The Story of the Mountain
  • Orientation
  • You could never take a car to Greenland
  • At your age I wore a darkness
  • Past
  • Heart
  • Stitches
  • The Crows
  • Let's Not Begin
  • Home-Free
  • Deer Field
  • Nest
  • Size Equals Distance
  • Harrowing
  • Lullaby
  • Where Honey Comes From
  • Rough Air
  • Leaves
  • The Hunters
  • Parachute
  • If anyone can survive
  • Storybook
  • Stonefish
  • Illustration
  • Invincible
  • Your Tongue
  • Splinter
  • The Mother
  • What I Carried
  • Good Bones
  • Transparent
  • Clock
  • Future
  • Cloud Study
  • The Hawk-Kite
  • Reading the Train Book, I Think of Lisa
  • Panel Van
  • Poem with a Line from Bluets
  • Dear
  • Mountain Child
  • Love Poem
  • Rain, New Year's Eve
  • Acknowledgments
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this collection titled for a poem that became an unlikely viral sensation, Smith follows The Well Speaks of Its Own Poison by exploring the sensorium mothers and children share in a place where "deer still find their way to the backyard." Suburban as it may be, strangeness and terror manifest in this setting, while surreal sound and color imbue the ordinary with surprising affect, as in the "glitter-black overlap of shingles" or "lit/ windows painting yellow Rothkos on the water." The collection features many meditations-on past and future, life and death-but the ones that stand out revolve around motherhood, particularly the magic and trauma of motherhood and motherlessness. Smith considers, from a personal perspective, the violence of Caesarean section ("Twice/ they cut babies from my body") and miscarriage ("you who have me/ in common-not-mother, mother// you weren't to have"). She elevates motherhood to something akin to an aesthetic or theology. "The mother is glass through which/ you see, in excruciating detail, yourself," she writes. For mothers and non-mothers alike, Smith shares one possible orientation to the world whose rottenness she catalogues along with all that makes it, in her view, still worth loving: "Let me love the world like a mother./ Let me be tender when it lets me down." (Oct.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.