Taking off from the Promethean myth of human creation, Gillian Sze's
second poetry collection explores the "anatomy of clay" and the
individual as a sentient mystery. At times reflective, instructional,
playful, or strange, the first section, Quotidianus, offers
observational poems, which recount intimate and ordinary moments often
missed, overlooked, or forgotten. Sze tugs at the fabric of habit and
amidst the urban mundane finds her subjects in a woman waiting for the
bus, a neighbour who talks to his plants, a girl smoking after a storm.
The following section, Extimacy, takes a lyrical and confessional turn,
veering inwards, dealing reflexively with the materiality of inner life:
the self as ingredients, the self as experiment, the self as animal and
artist. The Anatomy of Clay finds exceptions in the most prosaic
conditions and the ineffable distinctions between people, selves,
objects, and histories.