Bloodline bookcover

Bloodline

Ansley Clark 

(Author)

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Description

In Bloodline, Ansley Clark navigates the body's systems as a legacy that comes to us in the shadows. A woman belongs "to everyone" as she reads the world around her, its systems and signs, and understands the way fate is inscribed from within. I startled at each poem, the wild complexity and fortitude of language, and the fragility of a speaker mired in longing. These are poems I want to keep near, return to, speak out loud as incantations.

-Ruth Ellen Kocher, author of Archon / After


Bloodline isn't so much a poetry collection as it is an inhabitable installation of intergenerational healing from illness, patriarchy, settler colonialism, and imperial capitalism. The poems provide "light in an ill-lit century" where systems of subjection pulse under the skin and a mother's illness opens into a confrontation with an America where "the systems disconnect us." Give me a poem by Ansley Clark any time as a gust to sharpen my perception of the world.

-Rushi Vyas, author of When I Reach for Your Pulse


In riveting language that fractures generational systems of oppression into all its terrible crystals, Ansley Clark's Bloodline fully embodies Muriel Rukeyser's timeless, yet always urgent call and response: "What if one woman told the truth about her life? The world would split open." Let us praise Ansley Clark for poetry that defies so much in Bloodline's exceptional making to revive respect, dignity, power, and love.

-Sandra Yannone, author of The Glass Studio

Product Details

PublisherMoonpath Press
Publish DateSeptember 05, 2024
Pages118
LanguageEnglish
TypeBook iconPaperback / softback
EAN/UPC9781936657872
Dimensions9.0 X 6.0 X 0.3 inches | 0.4 pounds

About the Author

Ansley is a writer and teacher from the Pacific Northwest. She holds an MFA in Poetry from the University of Colorado Boulder and is the author of the chapbook Geography (dancing girl 2015). Her work has appeared in Poetry Northwest, Colorado Review, swamp pink, Bennington Review, and elsewhere. She currently works as the Director of the Writing Center at Evergreen State College and teaches poetry and mixed media workshops at local community arts organizations, including Hugo House in Seattle. She lives in Olympia, Washington with her dog.
Ansley is a writer and teacher from the Pacific Northwest. She holds an MFA in Poetry from the University of Colorado Boulder and is the author of the chapbook Geography (dancing girl press, 2015). Her work has appeared in Poetry Northwest, Colorado Review, swamp pink, Bennington Review, and elsewhere. She currently works as the Director of the Writing Center at The Evergreen StateCollege and teaches poetry and mixed media workshops at local community arts organizations, including Hugo House in Seattle. She lives in Olympia, Washington with her dog.

Reviews

In Bloodline, Ansley Clark navigates the body's systems as a legacy that comes to us in the shadows. A woman belongs "to everyone" as she reads the world around her, its systems and signs, and understands the way fate is inscribed from within. I startled at each poem, the wild complexity and fortitude of language, and the fragility of a speaker mired in longing. These are poems I want to keep near, return to, speak out loud as incantations.

-Ruth Ellen Kocher, author of Archon / After


Bloodline isn't so much a poetry collection as it is an inhabitable installation of intergenerational healing from illness, patriarchy, settler colonialism, and imperial capitalism. The poems provide "light in an ill-lit century" where systems of subjection pulse under the skin and a mother's illness opens into a confrontation with an America where "the systems disconnect us." Give me a poem by Ansley Clark any time as a gust to sharpen my perception of the world.

-Rushi Vyas, author of When I Reach for Your Pulse


In riveting language that fractures generational systems of oppression into all its terrible crystals, Ansley Clark's Bloodline fully embodies Muriel Rukeyser's timeless, yet always urgent call and response: "What if one woman told the truth about her life? The world would split open." Let us praise Ansley Clark for poetry that defies so much in Bloodline's exceptional making to revive respect, dignity, power, and love.

-Sandra Yannone, author of The Glass Studio

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