Poetry. Offering a new narrative of physical body constituted in perilous scenes of contact, HARM performs the loss of that fictive division between a unified body and its surrounding world.
Terrifying and unlooked-for harmonies emerge in these poems, which dwell in a medicalized landscape where both the body and the land are monitored and laid bare. Troubling the idea of cure by
recasting it in the terms of harm, HARM shifts between warning and error, nature and the body. In the sense of Baudelaire's "correspondences," bloodclots externalize into "sunclots" and the air
is "rusty with blood." The book troubles the idea of cure by casting it also as a form of harm itself. Moving amid the prose poem and the lyric, HARM navigates a landscape of extremity both
frightening and filled with wonders.