JavaScript is disabled in your web browser or browser is too old to support JavaScript. Today almost all web pages contain JavaScript, a scripting programming language that runs on visitor's web browser. It makes web pages functional for specific purposes and if disabled for some reason, the content or the functionality of the web page can be limited or unavailable.

Sunday, May 18, 2025

Good down to the bone

by

20131026

Most peo­ple who love po­et­ry know that a po­em may ac­quire more of its own life when said aloud, re­cit­ed by some­one who un­der­stands the rhythm of the thing, the places that em­pha­sis and an­ti-stress ought to go. Read­ing Ma­li­ka Book­er's Pep­per Seed, then, is like want­i­ng to taste the raw strength of each po­em, where al­most every po­em cleaves to a pow­er­ful back­bone of in­tent.These po­ems are not just for de­mure tast­ing with good table­cloths and Sun­day lunch man­ners; in fact, they're for the op­po­site. They de­mand a di­rect, bone-gnaw­ing, ap­proach: they go down to the mar­row of what mat­ters and in read­ing them, so do you.This is Book­er's first full length col­lec­tion and was pub­lished by Peepal Tree Press in 2013. A British writer with Guyanese and Grena­di­an roots, Book­er's work has been pub­lished in sev­er­al an­tholo­gies and jour­nals. Her 2008 pam­phlet, Bread­fruit, was re­leased by Flipped Eye Pub­lish­ing. Book­er was the Roy­al Shake­speare Co's first Po­et in Res­i­dence.

There are un­com­fort­able places lodged in child­hood mem­o­ry, shared fa­mil­ial scars and per­son­al trau­mas buried be­neath the skin. The emo­tion­al lega­cy of our Caribbean so­ci­eties is, typ­i­cal­ly, to bear hard­ships with fake sto­icism, and much of Book­er's po­et­ic move­ment pris­es the rusty lid from com­mu­nal se­crets. These po­ems are say­ing what's not fre­quent­ly said even with­in the sup­pos­ed­ly equal­is­ing space of­fered through fic­tion.In Pep­per Sauce, a po­em with­in the col­lec­tion's first sec­tion, Tes­ta­ment, we read of a teeth-grind­ing grand­moth­er with "one hand push­ing in fresh hot pep­pers, seeds and all, turn­ing the han­dle of that old iron mill, squeez­ing the limes, know­ing they will burn and cut raw like acid." These pre­pared pep­pers have been spe­cial­ly marked for a pun­ish­ment met­ed out to a ter­ri­fied grand­daugh­ter, a penance that un­com­fort­ably prick­les in the mind long af­ter the po­em has been read.

Tes­ta­ment is barbed-wire-fenced with rev­e­la­tions like these, burst­ing at its seams with the cru­el­ty of ma­tri­archs; the en­durance of es­tate slaves; the re­joic­ing clam­our when a colonis­ing tyrant meets his end. In Death of an Over­seer, his demise prompts "women to raise up they red pet­ti­coats and dance, tram­pling he grave, while ma­chetes pound stone, lips drown rum and burn on high­wine."The col­lec­tion's oth­er sec­tions are Cru­cial Times, Lamen­ta­tions and Al­tars, fol­lowed by an Epi­logue that holds a sin­gle po­em, My Moth­er's Blues. This fi­nal piece is lit up with pri­vate mis­eries that are at once in­te­ri­or and syn­ony­mous with the com­plaints of moth­er­hood: the bur­dens of un­grate­ful chil­dren; the sep­a­ra­tions that work them­selves in­to a fam­i­ly as time goes on; the grim sad­ness of hav­ing no one left to feed, be­cause all the mouths one loves are dis­tant.To get to My Moth­er's Blues, a lilt­ing lamen­ta­tion and a mu­si­cal trib­ute, the read­er must walk with the nar­ra­tor on her oth­er jour­neys and these are con­duct­ed around the world. From Brix­ton to Brook­lyn, from Trinidad to Guyana and even in the seem­ing root­less space of oth­er, stranger coun­tries po­ems emerge like nec­es­sary sun­light. From mul­ti­ple places, they echo with flinty, mud-and-glit­ter truths. "This is the life your an­ces­tors lived," they say, fre­quent­ly fol­low­ing up ob­ser­va­tions culled from cen­turies ago with, "This is the life you are liv­ing now."

Pep­per Seed's po­ems are as in­ter­est­ed in check­ing out the dif­fer­ences be­tween our for­bear­ers and our­selves, as they are in telling sto­ries of how women nav­i­gate the world. Not every piece is a suf­fer­ing cry; far from it, some of these po­ems dance straight from the pages and in­to our de­sire for move­ment, for some ki­net­ic bac­cha­nal that spices things up and makes life worth liv­ing. In Sweet Liquor, the nar­ra­tor de­scribes a fete scene in which "man does tek over the dance­floor and smash they bod­ies, flesh hit­ting flesh, jump­ing and hol­ler­ing like the army evict them, like them bod­ies have nuff sin to wuk out they sys­tem."This is the cross­roads that emerges, ex­ul­tant­ly, through so many of these po­ems: life is salt­ed with every bit­ter­ness, but de­spite that, danc­ing rages on.As Pep­per Seed re­in­forces, the fiery spec­ta­cle of our brief walk on earth seeks out its own beau­ty. Like these po­ems, we call light and mir­a­cles to our­selves and deal with the dark­ness as it in­evitably hitch­es on for the ride.


Related articles

Sponsored

Weather

PORT OF SPAIN WEATHER

Sponsored