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Andrea Gibson’s latest collection is a masterful showcase from the poet whose writing and performances have captured the hearts of millions. With artful and nuanced looks at gender, romance, loss, and family, Lord of the Butterflies is a new peak in Gibson’s career. Each emotion here is deft and delicate, resting inside of imagery heavy enough to sink the heart, while giving the body wings to soar.
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Consuming poetry has become a chore as of late. As a poet and organiser of a spoken word event, I cut my teeth on Button Poetry ??? Neil Hilborn???s OCD, to be exact. My entire spoken word community (Wordsmiths of Kuching) has him to thank for even existing.
While much of our own spoken word is inspired by the likes of Button Poetry and poets such as Sarah Kay and Phil Kaye, I was also wary about letting too much Americanism hijack the kind of voices you might find in Sarawak, Borneo.
???that???s not entirely true. I couldn???t care less where my fellow local poets find their voice as long as they use it to speak their truth. I was the one struggling about my own voice and identity.
Andrea Gibson writes a lot about identity, identifying as queer and genderqueer, something that is hard for to comprehend if you???re not in the same position. ???Lord of the Butterflies??? sheds some of light into Gibson???s life. I read from another article that writing poetry helps them learn about their gender identity, and it???s helped me to understand it a little bit more through their eyes.
“With my gender it was never that I came to the page knowing who I was and wrote it down, but I would write to unpack my gender and learn my gender.” - Poet Andrea Gibson Shares How They Learned About Their Gender Identity Through Writing ??? Seventeen, May 2, 2018
As poets, we do this more often than not ??? unpack the big issues and the little details in our work. A lot of single-poet collections are a window into their lives at the time of writing, something that must be both difficult and cathartic.
I can relate. Not to their experience as a person, but to the inevitability of deep self-examination and revelations that may be impossible to bring up in casual conversation. Some of these revelations are relatable to everyone. This for example:
Of all the violence I have known in my life
I have never known violence
like the violence I have spoken to myself,
and I have seen almost everyone round me
hold the same belt to their own back,
an ambush of every way we???ve decided we???re not enough,
then looking for someone outside of ourselves
to clean that treason up.
Boomerang Valentine ??? Andrea Gibson
And this delightful moment of cheese meets wit meets me cry-laughing:
When she???s down I want to give her my best
pick-up lines. What???s your sign?
My sign has historically been STOP
but since meeting you I???ve changed it
to MERGE.
Give Her ??? Andrea Gibson
This is the kind of word-fu I stayed around for when I found spoken word. I am constantly moved by those who can take their journey and turn it into an art form that tells the rest of us we are not alone. Yes, our pain comes in different shapes but the power of voice brings us together.
Most of the pieces in ???Lord of the Butterflies??? are also on Gibson???s album ???Hey Galaxy???, which can be found on Spotify.
ARC courtesy of NetGalley.