Heather Dearmon's first collection of poetry, published by Finishing Line Press, is now available on Amazon! Please scroll down to read a poem from the book, as well as a review of water unto light by Ed Madden.
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water unto light, poems by Heather Dearmon |
Below is the poem, water unto light, originally published in Kalalak 2013 Anthology of Carolina Poets and the inspiration for the title of the book:
water unto light
this is my palm print
sealed in stone. these are
sealed in stone. these are
my breasts, still forming.
to awaken
to awaken
is to go down naked in
the early water. go down
until your head
is submerged, your feet lose
the bottom.
in the womb
you do not breathe, but
open to swallow.is submerged, your feet lose
the bottom.
in the womb
you do not breathe, but
there is always something
being formed: bone, breasts,
thought, love.
my young hand
cast in stone, cups the various tones
of light, the drops of wet feet
on the path
from water.
A review of water unto light by Ed Madden, poet, associate professor of English at the University of South Carolina, and author of Signals, Prodigal: Variations and Nest:Heather Dearmon's poetry reminds us that this world--the mortal world of families and illness and loss--is a world of both damage and grace. At the heart of the book is the image of the woman healed because she touched the hem of Christ's robe. This image suggests that grace may be found at the edges and margins, in the ordinary and the unremarkable, in the practices of daily life that help us go on, as she says in one poem, "as though life were simple." Or, "as though my father were not dead," to touch on the loss that drives this small but powerful collection. We're also reminded that grace, insufficient though it may be, can be found in words that console and sustain, in poetry like this.