What Magick May Not Alter: Poems of Tallulah & Vidalia
Read What Magick May Not Alter on a porch swing by a live oak if you can. This layered Southern fantasy is unlike any you've read before. Real world issues like the prevalence of the KKK, sexual assault, manslaughter, alcoholism, and complex family dynamics move the plot into emotionally treacherous and painfully real places. Twin sisters Lulah and Vi anchor this story of a magically gifted family told through poetry. Set in early nineteen-hundreds Louisiana, the choice to tell this story in verse sets it apart, making it feel like a spell book or a manifesto at times. Emotion sings through it clear and strong.
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Become an affiliateIlya Kaminsky, author of Deaf Republic writes:
Set in the American South, after the Civil War, in the time of lynchings and the KKK, JC Reilly's spellbinding narrative-in-verse follows the lives of Sibley women, who "are gifted in magicks." With charms and spells of storytelling these incredibly beautiful poems create for us the world of folklore and heartbreak, as we watch Sibleys trace their way through history, falling in love, conjuring future husbands, attending funerals, and whispering curses at lying men and incantations for survival in the impossible world of "Southern drizzle."
I love this book.
But why?
Because there is simply no one else like JC Reilly in contemporary American poetry. No one else able to create the world of a story with such enchantment and such seeming ease, while at the same time filling that world with so moving lyrics, memorable lyric portraits and meditations.
Because to just write beautiful poems, as she does, would already have been a true achievement.
Because Really goes above and beyond the mere collection of lyrics, creating a whole world for us here, with characters, plot.
All of which is to say: with What Magicking May Not Alter JC Reilly gives us that rarest of things--the debut of a literary master.
Collin Kelley, author of Render and Midnight in a Perfect World says:
JC Reilly casts a spell so complete that you will be instantly transported from wherever and whenever you are reading What Magick May Not Alter into the witchy milieu of the Sibley women of Caddo Parish, Louisiana at the turn of the last century. This epic poem about the bond between two sisters and the lengths they'll go to for love and revenge puts Reilly in the ranks of both Eudora Welty and Stephen Vincent Benét and belongs in the canon of Southern literature that will be read and referenced for centuries to come. Yes, it really is that good.
Linda Parsons, author of Candescent and This Shaky Earth
Under the Old Wives' Oak, the Sibley women and the Widow Solley ring-a-round incantations to both conjure and avenge love in JC Reilly's spellbinding What Magick May Not Alter: Poems of Tallulah & Vidalia. Whether fable stitched from ancient Celtic foremothers or documented history of a Shreveport, Louisiana, matriarchy, this haunted story in verse--and so beautifully crafted--casts us wholly into its inevitable ruin. Bound by moon phase and "unholy herbs," its power to cure, release, and curse is its unreckoned force. Magick may only bend "the will of one" but, as with the Sibleys, a bonfire smolders within each of us, ready to pluck out the heart of bloodshed and redemption alike.