Book of Potions bookcover

Book of Potions

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Description

Winner of the 2023 Kathryn A. Morton Prize in Poetry, selected by Ilya Kaminsky.

Written with tremendous urgency and ferocious candor, the prose poems of Book of Potions captures a woman caught in the middle of life: no longer young, not yet old, trapped between generations, locked in stereotyped roles and stultifying social norms, confined by other people's expectations and their projections of what a woman should be.

By turns enraged, funny, frustrated, astute and joyful, these short hybrid pieces (potion = poem + fiction) combine the lyric compression of poetry with the narrative expansiveness of prose. Readers will meander, spellbound, through a wildly imaginative dream world of fairy-tale landscapes, allegorical insights, social satire, thought experiments and vivid surreal imagery, scenes of otherworldly strangeness and haunting beauty. These potions are elixirs in language, some healing, some poisonous, all magical.

Product Details

PublisherSarabande Books
Publish DateFebruary 11, 2025
Pages104
LanguageEnglish
TypeBook iconPaperback / softback
EAN/UPC9781956046359
Dimensions8.5 X 5.4 X 0.5 inches | 0.3 pounds
BISAC Categories: Poetry, , Poetry

About the Author

Lauren K. Watel is a poet, fiction writer, essayist and translator. Book of Potions, winner of the Kathryn A. Morton Prize in Poetry from Sarabande Books, is her first book. Her work has appeared widely in journals such as The Paris Review, The New York Review of Books and The Nation. Her work has also won awards from Poets & Writers, Writer's Digest, Moment Magazine-Karma Foundation and Mississippi Review. Her prose poem honoring Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg was set to music by Pulitzer-winning composer Ellen Taaffe Zwilich, and the piece premiered at the Dallas Symphony. Born and raised in Dallas, Texas, she lives in Decatur, Georgia.

Reviews

"The imaginative scope and range of Book of Potions is marvelous. With so much tonal invention and play, not to mention grief, solitude, tenderness, angst and bravery, the book is truly a dreamscape: Watel has built a house with myriad rooms, each of them a dream that keeps spiraling. There is something reminiscent of Kafka's parables in Watel's perspective, something Calvinoesque and Borgesian and even Gogolian, yes. But in the end, I felt, the book has a peculiarly American metaphysics of the self, an isolated and estranged self constantly grappling with the larger forces. Out of this metaphysics a human voice begins to speak, and through speaking re-arranges the landscape as we know it." --Ilya Kaminsky, author of Deaf Republic

"Potion: That which, when swallowed, has the power to change the world around us. In this marvelous collection, Lauren K. Watel has profoundly altered my sense of what a poem can do and be. The land- and heart-scapes she conjures into being are both strange and uncannily familiar. Here is a poet who shows no mercy to the usual consolations of sentiment. I have not read so brilliant, so transformative and technically masterful a book of poems in years."--Linda Gregerson, author of Canopy

"Lauren K. Watel's Book of Potions comprises parables, gnostic and enigmatic narrative arcs and loops, secret recipes for the imagination, incantatory dramas, fierce judgments of the mind, equally fierce compassions, and a constant adventure of reflection that reflects not just the human self but the entire inner and outer dreamscape in which the self abides. A flawlessly written book of poems, powerful and self-contained in its sounds and its silences."--Vijay Seshadri, author of That Was Now, This Is Then

"When Kafka, writing his parables and fables, died, his gift transmigrated, with all its sly and despairing invention, its pitch-perfect ironies and imagistic and associative waywardness, into the soul of Lauren K. Watel. Her prose poems are the best kind of prose and the best kind of poem: offbeat, now fierce, now funny, acutely attuned to her own life and the life we live now: war, suicide, manias of all kinds; an ever expanding sense of dread and of lost possibility; love always on the brink of fulfillment colliding with human limitation; but never dour or preachy or easy to pin down. Her syntactic brilliance captures every least nuance of the personal, the social, and the spiritual." --Tom Sleigh, author of The King's Touch

"Book of Potions is a collection evoking the 19th century and early Modernist poetic innovations that created the prose poem, akin to the work of Charles Baudelaire, Francois Ponge, and Samuel Beckett in ironic edginess and the wandering itineraries of unconsoled dreams. Yet I also see kinship in the Chinese poets of the Tʻang who wrote mysterious, metaphysical dream-prose about journeys into other worlds--like the Taoist mondo of Chuang-tzu who dreamed he was a butterfly, then wrote he might've been a butterfly dreaming he was a man. In the way of these literary ancestors, Watel's own prose is cadenced, composed, and plotted as much by sound as the sense of dreams. Its style is refined, beautifully lyric, mysterious, and emerges from the heightened imagination of poetic flight. Nothing in American verse is quite like it. It is the poetry of the universe of ten-thousand things." --Garrett Hongo, author of Coral Road

"After drinking these potions Lauren K. Watel has brewed, I am at least one hundred years wiser. I wish I knew what spoon she used to stir poetry into prose with such mastery, such tenderness. Believe me when I tell you, I swallowed this book whole and grew a second heart." --Sabrina Orah Mark, author of Happily

"Just under the surface of Lauren K. Watel's sassy, wry, quizzical prose poems, nightmares thrum. Masks slip, and faces are missing; armies march; the speaker is 'playing solitaire at the end of the world'; recurrently, a father shoots himself in the head. Watel converts mayhem to fable, and makes a style out of survival. A gallant and original book." --Rosanna Warren, author of So Forth

"The playfully resonant title of Lauren K. Watel's Book of Potions not only positions it between genres, but also signals a book in a constant, fluid state of betweenness: a book fluxing between dream and awakening, between present, past, and future, illusion and disillusion. Each tightly composed 'potion' has the completeness of a prose poem, but each page turned is also a transition, a jump cut, another inventive link in an interior narration of ongoing transformation. Watel's style is a powerful element of her voice. There's wit, chiseled sentences, vivid imagery, and given the interiority, the presiding effect, rather than cinematic, is kinetic. Book of Potions is a masterpiece of sustained prose rhythm, and a wonderfully original debut."--Stuart Dybek, author of Streets in Their Own Ink

"Lauren K. Watel resituates language in these precise, startling and mordant prose poems. Attuned to the times and to all time, the author stewards these gorgeous pieces with a fine-tuned sense of how best to enter a reader's heart and mind."--Amy Hempel, author of Sing to It

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