1 copy of The Ocean from Here to Here by Eliot Cardinaux in paperback.
Includes a Bodily Press Logo sticker, mailed to you in thanks for your kind contribution
In The Ocean from Here to Here, Bodily Press founder, poet Eliot Cardinaux approaches poetry and poetics through stark lenses of abandonment, madness, and itinerance, asking oblique questions, and avoiding straightforward answers altogether as he explores an interiority rife with the world.
‘Eliot Cardinaux, in his latest collection, The Ocean from Here to Here, lays bare what it means to live and create and walk through a world where pain and loss are as inescapable as love. He begins with a journey: “I am tired, tired of carrying you / around in my heart. My pockets // are stuffed with tickets. Buses, / trains. At every chance I empty them.” Mile by mile, the poet’s voice carries the reader through articulate meditations with a searing vulnerability: “I can’t but get the feeling / that you’re praying for me. // Approach me at the edges. / You will never reach me.” A provocation of the heart that feels everything that matters and refuses to turn its back.’
—Suzanne Mercury, author of Hive
‘Eliot’s poetry carries the weight of its own ambivalence. Why would anyone bother to say that silence would do to express what need be? Why not just have the silence? Words, their music, are what we gift silence in reciprocity for what it boundlessly offers. Eliot’s offerings ask where we come from, where we are, and where we go. It is a cautionary gift. These poems say yes to leaping but remember leap’s link to ledge, to that ground which holds us while it spins and crumbles, reformulating itself beneath us.’
—Jo Ianni
‘“I’ve been thinking about the poem as island, lying between question & answer, being & becoming.” Eliot Cardinaux’s poems emerge from this most basic dialectic, simply stated but growing more and more complex, more and more mysterious. Their complexity lies in the tangles of thought and feeling; their mystery lies in the twists and turns of language. “Song feigns a sovereign / faith,” and couplet upon couplet, perhaps if that deception is maintained successfully, we can hear the truth.’
—Norman Finkelstein