Sunday, December 17, 2017

SILK EGG: COLLECTED NOVELS by EILEEN R. TABIOS

JONEL ABELLANOSA Engages


Silk Egg: Collected Novels (2009-2009) by Eileen Tabios
(Shearsman Books, Bristol, U.K., 2011)


Miniatures


I always expect the “hint of light” I’ve come to intimately know as, unless it doesn’t linger, the supremely creative mind. “Air forgets to chill” is enough to show me two bodies tangled in the desire for home.


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The mid-afternoon is a museum of miniatures. You may sit in the space between “ever on the brink” and “ever glinting.” Or draw closer to discern the signature brushstroke, the bluish shade, the silver gray. The italicized is sculpted into glints of light.


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Expansiveness says a novel is also a place for refugees. Sibilance – like in “The landmines still exist” – says a novel is also an etude. Rhythm is the creek in your circulatory system, and these are the pebbles conversing with water: “Acc,” “urate,” “maps,” “must be,” “a,” “moral.” Mastery calms your breathing. You realize you are the rhythm.


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Lights keep shifting. Your heart is the island in a matter of distance. The air is measured by the armor it wears – loneliness or pride. By the time the city in the story lends its radiance, rainfall outside enters pianissimo, and you realize: yes, that.


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Insight is a rattlesnake worthy of its molt if it springs a surprise in expectation’s doorway. Each line is slithery. Each sentence vibrates its tail. The venom I need is for my rebirth. Chapter III is longer than I expected – it is a python.


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Transition is how the cirrus wears its white. The ambiguities of formations are meant to be heard. The ambiguous bends light better than a trickle of water. If what you’re hearing in the story has drowned out the rain outside, then two minds have merged.


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The mind sometimes needs water more than light. If it blooms, it’s not always fully. The sentence is the pot that holds its roots, and if you see a mirror when you turn from the whitening sky, don’t be shy to smile.


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Odors are opioid, scents like groans of banned cigarillos. You don’t have to see to smell, because between description and what is left unsaid is memory. Here it might work differently. You remember something, and then you smell something. You look around, and don’t see what you smelled.


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The last time I saw kaleidoscopes in the air was after reading One Hundred Years of Solitude. It takes just one lightning, one thunderclap, for words to arrange and rearrange like pieces in a twirling mandala. An “easing from the landscape” is how you resist into silence.
           
You can read starting with the last sentence, ending with the first. You can take any sentence, any phrase, any word, and discover a self-sufficient world. This book of novels is a kaleidoscope – no definite shape, ever shape-shifting, ever recalibrating its beauty, retooling your heart as the instrument of its alchemy


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It was raining in waves and torrents. A cauldron boils in my stomach, my shins feeling cold, my hands clammy. I wanted to go out to buy paracetamol, but outside water had risen, searching for knees to devour.

But after reading my fever was gone.

Note: The white space after the asterisk below speaks as much.


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Jonel Abellanosa resides in Cebu City, the Philippines.  His poetry has appeared in numerous journals and anthologies including, Rattle, Anglican Theological Review, Poetry Kanto, Filipino-American Artist Directory, The McNeese Review and Marsh Hawk Review. Early in 2017 Alien Buddha Press published his third chapbook, “Meditations,” His latest poetry collection, “Songs from My Mind’s Tree” is forthcoming (Clare Songbirds Publishing House, New York).  He is a Pushcart Prize, Best of the Net and Dwarf Stars Award nominee.




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