A 2022 Washington State Book Award finalist
Environmental collapse. The betrayals and alliances of the animal
world. A father who works in a timber mill. The celebrities in our
feeds, the stories we tell ourselves. Loss, never-ending loss.
Self-Portrait with Cephalopod--selected by francine j. harris as
winner of the Jake Adam York Prize--is an account of being a girl, and
then a woman, in the world; of being a living creature on a doomed
planet; of being someone who aspires to do better but is torn between
attention and distraction.
Here, Kathryn Smith offers observations and anxieties, prophecies and
prayers, darkness and light--but never false hope. Instead, she incises
our vanities and our hypocrisies, "the bloody hand holding back / the
skin," revealing "the world's inner workings, / rubbery and caught
between the teeth." These are the poems of someone who feels her and our
failings in the viscera, in the bones, and who bears witness to that
pain on the page.
Self-Portrait with Cephalopod is an urgent and necessary collection
about living in this precarious moment, meditative and resolutely
unsentimental.