w i d e r is belladona*books' number 97, published in conjunction with the belladonna reading series in new york; rawlings read in october.
the chap' is subtitled "rarities & remixes from Wide Slumber for Lepidopterists", referring rawling's first book -- a delirious exploration of sleep as experienced by one immersed in the study of moths and butterflies, where the text itself will seem to flutter frantically, doze peacefully or rise to walk in its sleep.
Like wide, w i d e r moves through the life cycle of the lepidoptera and the states a human experiences in sleep; each of the six poems is listed in the table of contents next to a symbol which first appeared in wide and depicts a stage in these cycles.
w i d e r lifts off with "A Field Guide", listed by "O" - egg/insomnia.
Beginning this way, w i d e r feels like a field guide to the feral wide. Indeed, the vivid and surrealistic imagery of w i d e r seems somehow more concrete than the boundless and abstract concepts of wide.
In "Mil" I feel as if I see the Lepidopterist properly for the first time, suffering from dyssomnia ("C~"; egg, larva). s/he paces restlessly within the rhythm of the poem, which reads like a disrupted list of habits stemming from disrupted sleep:
To awake in dregs. To sleep-awake in pools of glass. Our body in elipses. Body in wings. Wings in fright --p.4, W I D E RIn "REMnants" we find snatches of dreams, as if collected in the morning, muddled and half remembered, but still powerful.
While the connection to wide is clear and fundamental, w i d e r holds itself distinct, existing independently rather than as an afterthought. The six poems are playful, dark, and engaging. w i d e r increases my appreciation for the fantastic depth & breadth of what rawlings has created by breeding sleep with lepidoptera.
Useful Links
theatre commutiny: wide slumber for lepidopterists
belladona*books
belladonna reading series
a. rawlings' blog
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