'Have you looked / have you looked deeply?' ask these poems, rooted in
the human body and its movement through an interconnected living world.
Bloom, Sarah Westcott's second collection, approaches the cultural and
physical spaces where human and non-human lives co-exist. These poems
are attuned to a tender, bleeding world in which 'all flesh is grass'
and language is matter. These are poems of resistance: attentive to
non-human life, 'eternal and plaintive ... counter-balanced, strange.'
Here are field flowers, walled gardens and lost species, the
particularities of 'undistinguished things ... seeds, waterbuts,
palpable concerns'. Exploring sacrifice and loss, these poems push at
the boundaries where girlhood and flower might bleed. These poems are a
hymn to being alive in the twenty-first century - the frailties and
vigour of life in all its dazzling form, its 'looped breath, perpetual
singing'.