Winner of the Wishing Jewel Prize. The poems of GONERS are lipograms, an ancient form that demands certain letters be excluded when writing, in Maxwell's case, the letters comprising the names of endangered animals. As she describes, "The poem 'Cheetah,' for instance, uses 21 of 26 letters, all but a, c, e, h, and t, so no articles, no cats, no being, no are or were or was, no choice, etc. (no etc.)." In the context of the corrosive effects of imperialism and industrialization, GONERS questions the common practice of elegizing and employs an alternative mode. The animals in the titles are absent from the poems--they're gone. Instead, in a haunting gesture, the poems foreground the role anthropocentrism plays in the sixth extinction underway. "In these harrowing poems of climate despair, Maxwell rakes elegiac songs from the 'sunken forms' that appear, in language and in landscape, as species vanish from our planet. These lyrics, virtuosic in their attention to image, line and sonic texture, pour into each animal-absence a full measure of radiant grief for all we've lost, and are losing. With each poem, GONERS opens profound spaces of inquiry, of mourning, and of reckoning unlike any I've read before; this book is a tour de force." --Kiki Petrosino, author of White A Lyric of Virginia "Kristi Maxwell's GONERS generates a wild and uncanny language for 'unknowing us.' Marking creaturely absences, inventing dizzying idioms, Maxwell's lipograms are a distorted, illuminating mirror held to our calamitous present. These astonishing poems offer a new way of understanding extinction as a massive terraforming project, not only of Earth systems and species lifeways, but also of language itself. Erased, enclosed, destroyed, the ecopoetic syntax of GONERS reveals the terrifying and wondrous work poetry can do to chronicle the violence of anthropogenic making and to imagine other possible futures."--Margaret Ronda, author of American Poetry at Nature's End "These poems are stuffed with sound as if to clamor out the silence to come. They are strangely more piercing in their skirting of the animal than if they went arrow-first at it. Maxwell expertly plucks the sonic gossip from the disaster we are in, revealing, poem by poem, these naked pages 'fresh as wet blood.'"--Eleni Sikelianos, author of Your Kingdom Poetry.
Kristi Maxwell currently lives and writes in Tucson. She is the author of Re-, Realm Sixty-four and Hush Sessions, along with the chapbook Elsewhere & Wise.