Poems that break down, expose, and reconsider our notions of time.
This collection speaks the language of the clock as a living instrument,
exposing the sensory impacts of our obsession with time. In oh orchid
o'clock, lyrics wind through histories like a nervous system through a
body. The poems speak to how we let our days become over-clocked,
over-transactional, and over-weaponed. With an instrumental sensibility,
Endi Bogue Hartigan investigates what it is to be close to
time--collective time, with its alarms and brutalities, and bodily time,
intricate and familial. She considers how can we be both captured and
complicit within systems of measurement, and she invites us to imagine
how to break from, create, or become immune to them. Her poems use
language to expose the face of the clock to reveal how gears press
against interconnecting systems--economic, capitalist, astronomical,
medical, governmental, and fantastical.