[L is for Laloo, darkness in a dress.]
L is for Laloo, darkness in a dress. Her body is very vulnerable tonight, there in the forest next to the highway. Only children on road trips notice her and wave. In her red dress, she is like a girl in a fairytale, geographically. (All the branches behind her have begun to stir.) This is what a girl does in stories: she walks slowly, almost meditatively, along the perimeter of a forest and then she veers. Are there forests in London? Yes. Are there forests in the ocean? Yes. Are there forests in New Jersey and Nebraska? Yes. She finds each forest in turn and enters it as a test of desire. It is radical desire but, unable to stop feeling what she came there to feel, she can't stop and now she is in the thick part of the country stumbling over the roots. This is walking—technically, no longer hitchhiking but something else. An intensive travel. Is this a forest or is it just a stand of pines next to the highway? Is it re-growth? Is it a tree or trees? Yes. A red girl goes into this yes and is never seen again, which will break the hearts of her parents when they receive the shoe. It is always a shoe on the asphalt, recovered from the scene then wrapped in paper and placed in a ziploc bag. Is this a scene? L is for Laloo kicking off her shoes and breathing deeply from her toes to her head, allaying her deep fear of the gathering dark. Is it dark yet? Yes. Quite dark. I can't see her anymore—just a shiver, moving through the trees. Something is coming towards her in the moment of contact that precedes alteration, something huge, but I can't see what it is. The question of home dissolves into the question of trees. L is for love which is blood: the gathering speed of a pulse though the person is standing very still in the space before touch there in the darkness which is real.
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- March 8, 2024
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“[L is for Laloo, darkness in a dress.]” from INCUBATION: by Bhanu Kapil.
Published by Kelsey Street Press on November 27, 2023.
Copyright © 2023 by Bhanu Kapil.
All rights reserved.
Reproduced by Poetry Daily with permission.
Bhanu Kapil is an Extraordinary Fellow of Churchill College, Cambridge, where she is writing/never-writing with the archive of Enoch Powell. The author of six books of poetry, Bhanu won the TS Eliot Prize for her most recent publication, How To Wash A Heart. She is also the recipient of a Windham Campbell Prize from Yale University, and a Cholmondeley Award from the Society of Authors.
Originally published in America in 2006, and out of print for the last seven years, a space for monsters is a formally innovative, hybrid-genre book that incorporates poetry and prose. Set in a shifting narrative environment, where human bodies, characters, and text are neither one thing nor another, this fragmentary-diaristic text journeys through the spaces in-between. Following protagonist Laloo—Cyborg, girl, mother, child, immigrant, settler—on a roadtrip through American landscapes, genre styles, and form, Incubation creates radical space for what is 'monstrous'.
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