LUXE
CAPACITOR
When they told me I was a witch
I believed them
I started stripping layers
to stay afloat
I liked to give the people
what they wanted
Approval powdered me
a milky Victorian
I could feed the whole village
on the whites of my eyes
with my meanest look
If I smiled I threatened pearls
my mouth an oyster
open for irritants
For maximum loveliness I tried just
a suggestion of suction
I drooled on my mirror
and nearly drowned
I grew these warts for my own sake
baked my skin on terracotta tiles
Shimmer and matte
powered my hold
their thickest polymers
couldn’t hold me
Brooklyn poet and editor Sarah Jean Grimm’s first poetry collection is Soft Focus (Montreal QC: Metatron,
2017), produced as part of the 2016 Metatron Prize. A collection of curious
first-person lyrics, Grimm’s poems explore and articulate issues of the self
and the body, and the ways in which culture alter our perceptions around both. There
is a dream-like element to the pieces here, suggesting that the “Soft Focus” is
half dream-state/half deliberate squint, whether for the sake of an altered
perception or self-protection (or both). Grimm’s poems seem to exert against
occasional exhaustion, cultural bullshit and growing pains; hers is a book of
uncertainty, perseverance and exploration. We have so many teeth,” she writes,
to open the poem “GLAM GIRLS,” “and / There is so much to be bitten and we have
/ Brittle bodies trying to be tiny things / It is such an effort [.]”
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