Book of Levitations offers up spells for roadkill and gravedigger’s shovels, for moths, hives, and sex, for corsets and underwire bras: “You’ll always overfill/what’s made to hold you,” an image of boundaries defied and bodies in rebellion that characterizes these numinous poems. Conventional beauty standards are challenged—even the chandeliers are “bored with their glints,” and mortality is resisted, as roadkill is revived “when it’s done being dead.” This collaboration between Champion and Sadre-Orafai infuses everyday objects with astonishment by defamiliarizing them. Moths are stand-in earrings. A girl, ordered to smile by a harasser, is told to do it but to “make sure it cocks like a gun.” In a spell for a new house, we are urged to not “let in guests with mud/on their shadows.” These poems protect and empower. They restore language to its proper magic.  

Diane Seuss, author of Four-Legged Girl and Still Life with Two Dead Peacocks and a Girl

This collection is full of ghosts. And they’re the kind of ghosts that you want to stay with you forever. In the first poem, “Predictions,” the collections starts off with a perfect line: “Like boys, you too were born with power—,” illustrating this book isn’t for someone who doesn’t want to throw out all the gender norms society works on. Each poem is a gift, focusing on a moment in time, your body levitating over and underneath and around the poems. The poems are spells, rituals, prayers, calls to all of us, inviting us all to take part in the poems, to be inside the poems, the poems’ characters. This is a book I will read again and again, and constantly feel “the sting.”

Joanna C. Valente, author of Marys of the Sea and editor of A Shadow Map: Writing by Survivors of Sexual Assault

In Book of Levitations, Anne Champion and Jenny Sadre-Orafai have created not a book but a world, one whose rules are ever-changing and always fierce. “You’ll have light/ but it won’t be in necklaces, broken/ chains tinkling in the dark,” they write, and they mean it—the poems in this collection are spells and decrees for a life after the expected, neat, clean life. Champion and Sadre-Oafai claim “there’s endless power/ in anything that’s been consumed,” and these poems prove it. They take expected ruin and turn it into glory and survival. There’s no silencing the speakers in Book of Levitations, and there’s no predicting what they might do with their surprising powers of resiliency and grit. 

Ruth Baumann, author of Parse and Retribution Binary

“These poems protect and empower. They restore language to its proper magic.”


Additional Praise

Eliza Browning reviews Book of Levitations at SUNDRESS


Gabino Iglesias reviews Book of Levitations at PANK

Previous
Previous

Next
Next