38.
Her body washes in, a tangle of seaweed and her
grandmother’s fake sapphires. He is disappointed about the way her body is
shaped. “I thought she was a whale.” We watch her arching her back, her eyes
sand-coated magnifying glasses. Ambulances never occur to us, we say later,
when the light is a funeral home disco in our un-made-up faces. We just wanted
to see some mating whales, we say.
American
poet Brynne Rebele-Henry’s remarkable first full-length poetry book is Fleshgraphs (Callicoon NY: Nightboat
Books, 2016), a “visceral engagement with
the politics and poetics of girlhood by a 14-year-old author.” Composed in
two hundred and sixty-six short, seemingly self-contained numbered sections over
a few weeks when the author was still only fourteen years old, Rebele-Henry’s Fleshgraphs exist in collusion,
collision and collage, pushing a conversation of girlhood, sex, the body,
intimacy and violence through an occasionally dark and even grotesque humour. “I
ask my wife if I can take a shit inside her.” she writes in section #106. Further
along, section #121 reads: “Her thighs taste like Lysol.”
From section to
section, the perspective, and even the narrator, shifts, presenting a sequence
of near-aphorisms that thrash and rail against the reader and each other. As she describes the collection in a recent interview: “[…] the book is a literal
graph of flesh. The book is composed of confessions (inspired by both religious
confessionals and online confessions), and is about benign or intense or
horrible things happening to bodies, and each experience is told through a
different numbered fragment. The book is also composed of fragmented short
paragraphs, or graphs. […] I was trying to write a feminist dissection of rape
culture and online confessions, but also a celebration of the body’s
resilience.”
104.
I sidle up to the cashier and undo the tie of
my trench coat and my breasts come out and I rub them against the conveyor belt
and lick my true love’s face.
Part
of what makes Brynne Rebele-Henry’s Fleshgraphs
so compelling is in its daring, honesty and straightforwardness, speaking
pointedly to “a range of sexualities,” perspectives and even personalities. Her
prose is fearless, rich and evocative, thick with detail and presence and
confidence, making this one of the most frighteningly-talented debuts I’ve seen
in a very long time.
1.
I alphabetize the girls by tens and letters. First:
Annie and her cellulite thighs that made her say of herself: walrus. I would
bite them with my too sharp incisors. Second: Betty and the weird sounds she
made that were more like birth than sex and her pinup rolled back hair. Third:
Carrie, and her light moustache. Fourth: Diana and her autumn mouth and how she
always burned cookies. I stop at six because that’s too fucking sad but I think
of her knuckles and the sound they made against my forehead still.
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