To 2040
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- $11.99
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
It is rare to find in one collection an entire skyline burning and the quiet to follow a single worm, to hear soil breathe—in Jorie Graham's fifteenth poetry collection, you do.
Jorie Graham’s fifteenth poetry collection, To 2040, opens in question punctuated as fact: “Are we / extinct yet. Who owns / the map.” In these visionary new poems, Graham is part historian, part cartographer as she plots an apocalyptic world where rain must be translated, silence sings louder than speech, and wired birds parrot recordings of their extinct ancestors. In one poem, the speaker is warned by a clairvoyant “the American experiment will end in 2030.” Graham shows us our potentially inevitable future soundtracked by sirens among industrial ruins, contemplating the loss of those who inhabited and named them.
In sparse lines that move with cinematic precision, these poems pan from overhead views of reshaped shorelines to close-ups of a worm burrowing through earth. Here, we linger, climate crisis on hold, as Graham asks us to sit silently, to hear soil breathe. An urgent open letter to the future, with a habit of looking back, To 2040 is narrated by a speaker who reflects on her own mortality—in the glass window of a radiotherapy room, in the first “claw full of hair” placed gently on a green shower ledge. In poems that look to 2040 as both future and event-horizon, we leave the collection warned, infinitely wiser, and yet more attentively on edge. “Inhale. / Are you still there / the sun says to me.” And, from the title poem, “what was yr message, what were u meant to / pass on?”
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Graham ( The Last Human) stuns with this end-of-life-as-we-know-it guide for those who may need to prepare for the last, ethereal blows; "The earth says/ it is time. Everyone checks their watch./ Your destination is in sight. Be/ ready. Brace." Settings range from "Rocks// burning in the/ distance. Then distance/ burning" to medical facilities and domestic spaces where a quince branch blooms in a vase. The book inhabits the shape-shifting grammar of the future perfect: "Did we// survive at the end/ of this story, I ask/ the sun. I give up/ on tenses here." The end is imagined and undone again: "I am spending my life, I thought. I am un-/ prepared. It is running thru/ my fingers. The wind is/ still wild. My bones hurt sometimes/ causing pain. It is not terror./ I feel for the cash in my pocket./ I do not have time to prepare." At one point, the poet is addressed by the sun, who first encourages, "Be there, as long as you can,// take it, be there/ as I rise"—and finally condescends, "But how/ I admired yr/ breathing... The end is/ a hard thing to// comprehend. You did not /comprehend it." This is a rare gift: an ardent and pitiless anthem to a crazed, razed world.