Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Not a Force of Nature

Rate this book
If capital makes life a seething, complex nightmare for most people on the planet's surface, if "words do cleave the producer from the land," then what does all this dispossession feel like? Amy De'Ath turns poetry into a hot, potent, and highly funny form of criticism, in which social force is felt intimately, and voiced in the acid niceness of a work email. Amy's poems move like pieces of machinery in a cognitive amusement park, which spit you a thousand feet into the air but keep your viewpoint fixed on the same spot as before—what's different? "Land in Saskatchewan, land in Delhi," or "everything…that you want from women and gays." Not a Force of Nature makes me want to change everything. "Behold me I'm you now," Amy writes—we should be so lucky, to be thus transformed. — Kay Gabriel

Not a Force of Nature's expertly crafted poems explore the catastrophe we live among and speak through. They form a sort of feminist manifesto addressed to all forms of resistance. But also: here are love sonnets! This book is angrily precise and always a lot of fun. "No, you're a Canadianist!" — Kevin Davies

Not a Force of Nature is the kind of book that becomes possible only after rejecting the "we" evoked so often in contemporary literary culture—sometimes said to need poetry now more than ever, sometimes called community. Amy De'Ath's motley vision of solidarity, of "actual emboldened people," is way weirder, more lively, and possible. Nor do these poems content themselves, like the ghost of Marxist theory past, with pointing towards the contradictions that surround them. Do you remember email? Sonnets? Not a Force of Nature is like that, thrashing inside generic forms and always coming next: after the tendency of the rate of profit to fall, after Jane's abortion service, after the 1970s, 80s, and 90s, after Creeley, after Raworth, after Mayer, after the Xenofeminist Manifesto, after Pluto enters Aquarius. "There are still tactics like this roaming free," De'Ath writes. There are still these fervent lyric parries. Be with Not a Force of Nature now. — Stephanie Young

Through slips of verbal acuity, Amy De'Ath scrapes her way out of determinism to a world "made by hands," where our material relations are ours to make and break. History is long and history is short. History is translucent. De'Ath presents the Ferris wheel of capitalist production, where the subject lives once as worker, twice as commodity. Here, in these "concrete trousers," is a "totally liberated" working class poem turning everything into nothing as praxis. — Anahita Jamali Rad

72 pages, Paperback

Published September 1, 2024

23 people want to read

About the author

Amy De'ath

10 books1 follower

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
9 (64%)
4 stars
4 (28%)
3 stars
1 (7%)
2 stars
0 (0%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Sakura.
26 reviews
February 7, 2025
complex and philosophical and yeah, “love will save us love will save us love will save us love will save us”
Profile Image for S P.
650 reviews119 followers
November 16, 2025
Sonnet beginning with a line from George Economou's Piers Plowman
For this good god grant me forgiveness for
My worthless living during my entire lifetime
I couldn't be less inventive if I tried
What is the trajectory of the virus now?
Eludes me like a task I still must do
To exit this concept real and imagined
by absconding piss babies, unwise Grandpas slapped
then flung laterally on the eyes, nose and mouth.
On this day of nationalist fervour
I be not Mercy, flying through the trees:
dioramas of thinning spirals that slide
on water then return back to us panting
and plumper than before, a force of nature splayed
there where, scientifically, I cannot be mercy (26)
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.