Finalist for the Lambda Literary Award in Lesbian Poetry

pleasureis amiracle
A book of poems written out of a depressive episode, in which a devotional approach to music and desire reestablishes communication between the poet’s body and the world.
Price range: $6.49 through $13.46
In pleasureis amiracle, the poems invoke the lyric and refuse it, moving between time and sound—words re-connect and re-cohere, resisting separation and challenging readers to feel their way to meaning. Perception becomes a many-limbed entanglement from which the reader is never let go. Music is both divine and accessible, a sublimation of everyday movements into an erotics of sensation. An experiment in form as much as content, it asks what can be cured by music, what is trans about desire, and how can one allow the body to feel what the mind sees, or vice versa.
Praise
The way Messinger produces and overcomes space, I want to weep. ‘It’s all right if you don’t return my love’—what an image of grace. In the red interplay of anticipation and knowledge, she shows us bodies as bits of psychic pressure, active, luminous, without guarantees. How green is the valley of syntax, of poems that don’t feel without thinking. ‘she’s gone isn’t it, I will wake up there wont i—.’ Look at what language can do, always more than what we can say, when it sees the struggle inside itself.
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Reviews
The poems talk about memory as though time itself were a screen saver—a series of recurring dreams that overlap.





