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Parallel Press Poetry Chapbooks
What the Body Knows Rolling and dancing in mud, a child discovers an ecstasy of connection, a "moment of pure light/when I was the land...." So Townsend launches an exploration of "the truth of the body," drawing clear lines of distinction between the liberating intuitions of the body elemental and the cramping coercions of the body social. Several poems are rooted in the nitty-gritty of familiar female experience with its perpetual "struggling to fit even/when the fit cinched me...." Through this voice, vivid with narrative detail and perception, we encounter girls embarking on sexual initiation and experimentation, young women shadowed by abuse, mature women mourning the failure of intimacy. A second voice, lighter and more lyrical, records the speaker's insights (even revelations) as she begins to unlearn convention and invokes her own internal compass. "I am inviting back the one/who has been away,.../calling out to her,/the way a psychic calls her soul/back to her body,.../I am requesting that she teach me/to remember..../I call her home to me." This newly trusted self deserves clothes from Victoria's Secret, "no matter [that].../I'll never look like these women." Her face "becomes more my own each day...." And sexuality and connection regain their promise. With a delicate grace of image and language, Townsend proposes: "If I called you river.../If you called me river.../If you were water entering water..../If the river knew anything more/than this sweet braiding and undoing of water,/that feeds everything/and yearns for everything and is,/in its rushing, everything the river can know." Centering herself thus in what the body knows, Townsend finds homecoming. Alison Townsend is the author of The Blue Dress (White Pine 2003). Her poems and essays have appeared in Calyx, Crazyhorse, Kalliope, New Letters, Nimrod, The North American Review, Prairie Schooner, Puerto del Sol, Rattle, The Southern Review, Spoon River Poetry Review, The Women's Review of Books, and many other journals. Her work has also been frequently anthologized, most recently in Are You Experienced?: Baby Boom Poets at Midlife, A Fierce Brightness: Twenty-five Years of Women's Poetry, Fruitflesh: Seeds of Inspiration for Women Who Write, The Greatness of Girls: Famous Women Talk About Growing Up, Women Runners: Stories of Transformation, Boomer Girls: Poems by Women of the Baby Boom Generation, and Claiming the Spirit Within: A Sourcebook of Women's Poetry. Her awards include the first place Sue Saniel Elkind prize from Kalliope in 1999, and residencies at Norcroft, Soapstone, Hedgebrook, and Dorland Mountain Colony. She teaches English, creative writing, and women's studies at the University of Wisconsin at Whitewater, as well as In Our Own Voices, a private writing workshop for women. She lives in the farm country outside Madison, Wisconsin with her husband. To order this or any other Parallel Press chapbook, download, print, and complete the Parallel Press chapbook order form. If you have difficulty, please visit the ordering information page.
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