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Book Review: The Smallest of Bones by Holly Lyn Walrath

The Smallest of Bones by Holly Lyn Walrath

Clash Books, 2021

ISBN-13: 978-1944866952

Available: Paperback Bookshop.org |  Amazon.com )

 

“If you strip me down to my bones / am I yours?” the speaker asks, in Holly Ryn Walrath’s poetry collection The Smallest of Bones. Groups of poems divided into sections called Cranium, Mandible, Sternum, Sacrum, Spine, Calcaneus, and Temporal provide a larger osteo-literary structure into which the poems slip like so many small bones surrounding the artistic organs of thought and emotion.

 

Sometimes surprising, often disturbing and provocative, these poems are the life-blood emerging from the marrow of meaning. There are vivid images of “ocean eyes” and “demon’s tongue,” a couple symbolized as “the tree burning after” and “condemned women” as metaphorical “rare birds” who should be studied. One speaker asks, “hold me under your tongue / like unspoken regret,”  another confesses, “I carry my face in my pocket.”

 

There are many memorable lines to savor throughout the collection. Some of these rhyme: “the smallest of bones / is a part of the hammer in your ear / love is a heartbreak you can hear.” Some are startling: “ask me, where is your wild woman? I shot her in the face” and “wouldn’t you rather be something violent if you had the choice?”

 

Walrath also considers love, but it is not in the usual terms. In the moment of connection, “his hands tensile slipping under my radar my heart was sonar,” the speaker remembers, and “to love so much your body changes / curving together like two halves of the taijitu or the earth and the moon / must be dreadful and excruciating,” reflects another.

 

Walrath also comments on many other topics like sex and gender, physical attraction, memories, science, ghosts, birds, parasites, the nature of women, death, dreams, pain, bodies, flowers and writing. Even the Table of Contents, composed of the section headings and first lines of the poems, can be read as a poem. Try it!

 

“I wrap bone chains around your head,” Walrath writes. Yes, she does, and I recommend it.

 

Reviewed by Nova Hadley

Book Review: Cradleland of Parasites by Sara Tantlinger

cover art for Cradleland of Parasites by Sara Tantlinger

Cradleland of Parasites by Sara Tantlinger

Rooster Republic, 2020

ISBN-13 : 978-1946335395

Available:  Bookshop.orgAmazon.com )

Sara Tantlinger has infected many horror fans with a burning passion for poetry, not an easy feat, and the exquisite entries into her newest collection are damn impressive.  I first encountered her work in Devil’s Dreamland, a book devoted to the unimaginable horrors of serial killer H.H. Holmes, both his murders and the monstrous, puzzle box house he created to feed the evil within him, and found myself falling back in love with the form.  It is a difficult task to imbue a reader with true dread and wonder for a single poem, let alone an entire collection. Only a few other poets I have read have riled up the beast within me repeatedly, to accomplish that dark grasp into the soul.

Tantlinger has now done it twice.

Readers of Cradleland of Parasites might draw some parallels to Poe’s “Masque of The Red Death” for obvious reasons, or recognize the nihilism of Thomas Ligotti, but Tantlinger delves deep beyond these influences to create a surreal, yet beautiful nightmare in this 104 page part examination, part love letter to the plague. Yet there’s life in these poems that transcends that macabre mindset and raises it to the art form it aims to be. Imagine Kathe Koja, Gwendolyn Kiste, or Catherynne Valente if they dove soul first into poetry. That image may not be adequate but it’s what is painted in my psyche upon slipping from one piece to the next.

The author treats disease as immortal, untouchable, and unbeatable, which in this world, obviously has plenty of merit. The poems that speak to the reader from the point of view of the plague doctors and victims are fierce, yet touching, but it is the ones in which the disease itself speaks its mind and sings its song where the full impact strikes, and pierces the soul.

It’s bittersweet that Sara Tantlinger released this during the pandemic of our times but it might just serve as a talisman of hope for life, or salve for the lingering doom that Covid brings.

That it is a finalist for the Bram Stoker Award speaks to the horror it evokes in readers’ minds. During this tumultous time, it serves as a fitting reminder of our own mortality, both special and irrelevant in the vast cosmos. Highly recommended.

Reviewed by David Simms

 

Editor’s note: Cradleland of Parasites is a nominee on the final ballot for this year’s Bram Stoker Award in the category of Superior Achievement in Poetry. 

 

Stoker Review Project: Links to Reviews

 

Monster Librarian has been reviewing the nominees on the final ballot for the Bram Stoker Award and they have been coming in steadily! Here’s a list of the nominees for each category with links to our reviews so far. I’ll be updating this as new ones come in, so check back regularly!

Interested in purchasing any of these? Here’s a link to Stoker Nominees at Monster Librarian’s Bookshop Page.

 

5/22: Grotesque: Monster Stories by Lee Murray has a link added in the category of Superior Achievement in a Fiction Collection.

5/20: Children of the Fang and Other Genealogies by John Langan has a link added in the category of Superior Achievement in a Fiction Collection.

5/19The Return by Rachel Harrison has a link added in the category of Superior Achievement in a First Novel! We’ve reviewed all the first novels now, scroll down to the links and see what we had to say!

5/19: True Story by Kate Reed Petty has a link added in the category of Superior Achievement in a First Novel.

5/19: Ghost Wood Song by Erica Waters has a link added in the category of Superior Achievement in a Young Adult Novel! We’ve got all the books in this category reviewed now!

5/17: The Taxidermist’s Lover by Polly Hall has a link added in the category of Superior Achievement in a First Novel.

5/16: Tome by Ross Jeffrey has a link added in the category of Superior Achievement in a First Novel.

5/15Women Make Horror: Filmmaking, Feminism, Genre edited by Alison Peirse has a link added in the category of Superior Achievement in Non-Fiction.

5/12: Devil’s Creek by Todd Keisling has a link added in the category of Superior Achievement in a Novel.

5/11: Bent Heavens by Daniel Kraus has a link added in the category of Superior Achievement in a Young Adult Novel.

5/9End of the Road by Brian Keene has a link added in the category of Superior Achievement in Non-Fiction.

5/7: The Bone Carver (Night Weaver #2) by Monique Snyman has a link added in the category of Superior Achievement in Young Adult Fiction.

5/4: Cradleland of Parasites by Sara Tantlinger has a link added in the category of Superior Achievement in Poetry.

5/4:  Spectre Deep 6 by Jennifer Brody and Jules Rivera has a link added in the category of Superior Achievement in a Graphic Novel.

5/3Road of Bones by Rich Douek, art by Alex Cormack has a link added in the category of Superior Achievement in a Graphic Novel.

4/22: The Masque of the Red Death  by Steven Archer has a link added in the category of Superior Achievement in a Graphic Novel.

4/22:  Worst Laid Plans: An Anthology of Vacation Horror  has a link added in the category of Superior Achievement in an Anthology

4/5:  Two Truths and a Lie by Sarah Pinsker has a link added in the category of Superior Achievement in Long Fiction.

 

 

Superior Achievement in a Novel

Superior Achievement in a First Novel

Superior Achievement in a Graphic Novel

Superior Achievement in a Young Adult Novel

Superior Achievement in Long Fiction

Superior Achievement in a Fiction Collection

Superior Achievement in a Poetry Collection

Superior Achievement in an Anthology

Superior Achievement in Non-Fiction