in the poem / of the world / there once / was a map / of the map /
composed in / the likeness / of a poemIn this riddling and seeking book
of poems, Edward Carson navigates the emotional, often contradictory
intelligence of the heart and mind. In three interrelated segments,
whereabouts powerfully charts the tight emotional spaces between
thinking and language, beauty and perception, love and the polemics of
self and other.Taking on cartographic distortions and dynamics of the
map metaphor, "thereabouts (or the mapmaker's dilemma)" playfully
confronts the quandaries of personal navigation when the wants and needs
of the esemplastic mind are forever devising new places to be. Exploring
the brain, its neurons, and serpentine synaptic connections, "hereabouts
(in fourteen scans)" advances a poetry of rhizomic communication
capturing networks of thought and feeling that spring from both conflict
and caress. Within a relationship's countless masquerades and
revelations, "whereabouts (the lovers' discourse)" invites the reader to
eavesdrop on a series of intimate conversations wherein lovers argue and
act out their richly populated inner lives, addressing issues of gender,
pleasure, communication, control, and sex.