: Hurricanes :
IF YOU START SOME SHIT IN
PUBLIC
better not come home
bend all the ways I howl or be cut
out baby photos
don’t dare
who would
drop this whip? heat?
help?
what help
I’m
only just now going through
Wires That Sputter: Poems (Toronto ON:
McClelland and Stewart, 2023), the full-length debut by
the award-winning Toronto-based artist, public speaker and poet Britta Badour (a performer
otherwise known as Britta B.). I get books in the mail nearly every day, and it
took nearly a year to realize that McClelland and Stewart hadn’t actually sent
along the spring 2023 list (which is why I’m so late), so this title only
landed quite recently. There is such a wonderful sense of performative
expansiveness to these pieces, poems composed through a blend of pattern,
rhythm, confident gesture and deep sense of the personal. She writes with a
sense of loss and of heart; an open-hearted intimacy, whether writing on family,
politics or culture. “In May, if asked,” she writes, as part of “
: If
His Mama :,” “I would’ve said you’ll either have hurricanes / or
become one.” These poems are performative, declarative and substantive,
offering a deep sense of storytelling and rhythm, as well as a deep moral
foundation, one that holds through and despite all as an anchor against any
storm. “here we are bewildering,” she writes, as part of “
: Letters to
Miranda :,” “our single mothers’ make-believe, we sisters / here we
are dancing to Boys II Men / here were are maybe four and six and Miranda is
leaving / I repeat the alphabet for twenty years [.]”
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