Brilliant Little Body
(By Brett Elizabeth Jenkins) Read EbookSize | 21 MB (21,080 KB) |
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Author | Brett Elizabeth Jenkins |
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Although this is a kick ass book of poems, and NOT a self-help book, I have to confess that reading it elevated myself immeasurably! I need to hire the speaker in these funny, vulnerable poems to be my guru. She admits everything. Her sense of the absurd is epic. She understands that humans have to make friends with chaos, that this is especially true for women, and that the imagination is the best escape hatch we have. She gets that beauty and appetite and loss and love and making a million mistakes are inextricable. "There's an earsplitting loneliness to this life—" she tells us, so we know we can trust her. Jenkins is a generous, witty poet, able to juice the fruits of melancholy and make them into wine. She's a Zen master of smart self-implication, transforming folly and regret into frisky resilience.
~ Amy Gerstler, author of Index of Women
Brilliant Little Body walks into the darkest hallways of the self, shines a flashlight on the shadows, and calls them what they are: beautiful, brutal, and entirely human—and Jenkins is our trusty and whip smart tour guide. These poems are dazzling and quick, each as sharp and brilliant as an eclipse. Sometimes devastating, sometimes hilarious—but always driven by a white-knuckled hope and cynical optimism. This collection strikes the perfect balance of playful and ruthless—stories of grief, the body, and heartbreak are told with the kind of poetic light that allows each one of us to see ourselves with a little more compassion and clarity. Whether you pick this book up because of its keen poetics or its persistence toward love no matter the cost, you will be left with a deeper, truer humanity. Above all, Jenkins writes with the kind of witty advice we all wished for from a big sister—and what more could we ask for?
~ Desireé Dallagiacomo, author of Sink
The speaker in Brilliant Little Body vulnerably kneels at big questions then bravely seeks the answers. Brett Elizabeth Jenkins gently reminds us that human tragedies can strike anywhere: a parking lot of a Perkins, on frozen lakes, with butter dishes, but the heroic upswing of this collection is hope. We feel love in a tollbooth, we consider small delights like bedsheets drying in the wind, and being moon-drunk with ex-lovers. We wonder with the sympathetic speaker what of the next world? We truly want to know, and we want her to tell us and show us these impossible feelings of joy, this wise-hilarious poet. Jenkins has seismically shaken our hearts with a tender field guild for living, this, her direct tap into humanity, needs to be on every poetry bookshelf.
~ Erica Anderson, author of Midwestern Poet’s Incomplete Guide to Symbolism”