New England Book Awards Finalist
"Must-Read Poetry: July 2020," The Millions "Over the last four decades, Mathis (
Book of Dog) has quietly crafted lyrically precise, often harrowing poems in which the poet's 'throat is a long avenue of ice, / cutting the familiar good words/ at their source.' This generous volume draws from the poet's recorded gifts and losses: poems of early and late motherhood, a child's mental illness and institutionalization, human and nonhuman deaths within and beyond the poet's purview. . . .In these knowing poems, readers may recognize their own humanity, as well as the sometimes-impossible conditions of living."
–Publishers Weekly, starred review "An excellent collection that leads with her new poems, finely attuned to the body and aging."
–The Millions, "Must-Read Poetry: July 2020" "In reading this superb collection, I was often reminded of the closing of Randall Jarrell's '90 North, ' a poem of doubt and regret that somehow manages to quietly triumph over its bitterness. 'Pain comes from the darkness. / And we call it wisdom. It is pain.' Mathis's poems, like so many of Jarrell's, insist that pain and wisdom are often bafflingly symbiotic: they have learned to live with this injustice, and do so with a bravery and emotional depth that is sadly rare among contemporary poets."
–On the Seawall "Beginning with her astonishing first book,
Aerial View of Louisiana, in 1979, and now with her moving and poignant group of new poems, Cleopatra Mathis has surveyed and charted with ever-increasing lyric concision and dramatic intensity 'the ritual ground work' of human need. From book to book, Mathis demonstrates how memory extends its 'first claim' to include not only the mythic richness of her childhood in Louisiana but also the contrasting and complicating joy and grief of her life in New England as a transplanted Southerner. The resolute heart and keen human insights found everywhere in
After the Body: New and Selected Poems renew the 'claim' many readers of contemporary American poetry have made for decades, that Cleopatra Mathis is one of our most important and essential poets."
– Michael Collier