"Let us talk about light. How does your mother
pronounce it. How does your father bury it.
How does your brother borrow against it,
betting everything God promised."
This collection of poems is haunting and dazzling in a way that does not evade the seriousness and sorrow inherent to most of the themes Sun Yung Shin is tackling. Even more exciting that the lyricism Shin treats all their subjects with, is the intentionality behind word choices. The prologue explains that “hex” was originally a term for witch that holds no male equivalent. She ties it to witch, then to hag, then to “repulsive old woman”. It all comes together to unpack 'womanhood' in a powerful way.
The collection is dedicated to castaways: girls, women, daughters, orphans, seventh children, refugees, immigrants; and the ways one can be some/all of those identities at once. This piece is an ode to the strength in castaways that hosts a complex narrative of revenge, acceptance, and self searching. It unpacks carefully war, family dynamics, myth, fact, and trauma. All of this coincides with an overarching liberatory narrative out of loss, death, living, and surviving. My favorite piece is a poetic epic accompanied with illustrations by Jinny Yu that tracks Baridegi, a kings seventh orphaned daughter, as she goes on a journey to save his life. This is a retelling of a Korean myth that tells the origins of the first shaman. Life and death take on new meaning as we navigate our way to the underworld and back without apology, and with vengeance.
I found myself reflecting on a few different similar and entirely different feminist queer environmental theory anthologies. Thus, if you end up enjoying coiling around this poetry series and are interested in following through with these lines of thought, I highly encourage Donna Haraways Staying with the Trouble and Ana Tsings Mushrooms at the End of the World. Looking at Haraway and Shin in conversation, Haraway writes of string figures as a theoretical concept for drawing in humans, animals, and all other unrelated related beings biotic and abiotic into intimate connectivity. Shin relates us to primitive mice, soldiers blood to fish leaping from rivers, an eye plucked like a ripe cherry by a bird, and creates endless destructive single lines of work.
All in all, I was sucked in, chewed up, and spit out by this poetry collection in the best ways. I will be seeking out more Sun Yung Shin pieces in the future.
“Often she hid herself at the sight of beasts, forgetting that she was a beast herself. And the bear was frightened by the sight of bears up in the mountains— and afraid of wolves, although her father had been changed into one.”
Thank you to Coffee House Press and Edelweiss for the ARC in exchange for an honest review.