Poetry. Autobiography of a Marguerite is an innovative autobiography about illness, family dysfunction, and identity, and how they can shape one another. The narrator struggles with the effects of her auto-immune illness, and struggles to separate herself from her troubled mother.
"In this profound, book-length poem, Zarah Butcher-McGunnigle undoes the self right back to the nucleus and explores an extraordinary event in her life: an anonymous illness that swamps her and the lives of her ill-at-ease family. A mother who is lean with her cooking, a philandering father, and a narrator with ever swelling wrists and limbs. Butcher-McGunnigle's poetry evokes Anne Carson and Thalia Field. It is original, startling writing." - Sonja Yelich.
"Autobiography of a Marguerite is a grand achievement. The writing goes to the aching heart of disconnection and of longing for repair. It's obsessive and relentless, as befits the theme, circling and re-circling the fragmented self, drawing the pieces together. Butcher-McGunnigle has created a crooked beauty out of shards." - Sue Wootton, Takahe Magazine
Zarah Butcher-McGunnigle is the author of Autobiography of a Marguerite (Hue & Cry Press, 2014; Giramondo Publishing, 2026) Nostalgia Has Ruined My Life (Giramondo Publishing, 2021) and Leaves Fall Off To Create Drama (Giramondo Publishing 2026). Originally from Auckland, NZ, she currently lives in Melbourne, Australia.
I love this book because it defies traditional poetic convention, while at the same time allowing moments of more lyrical, poetic play through the quite stark emotional landscape. I love it because it doesn't shy away from sadness or beauty but both of these things are approached in an original way that feels honest. I love it because no story is linear, no family history contains one solid version of truth, and because the beauty and strangeness of family is that we are all made up of one another; biologically, emotionally and spiritually. We have many selves and some of these selves we feel uncomfortable with because maybe they don't belong wholly to us. An amazing book.
Brilliant, simply a brilliant book. I couldn't read this book slow enough and purposely delayed the finishing of it. The story was beautifully crafted and left images floating around my head for days.
Somewhere between 3 & 4 stars from me. It’s a unique work of poetry that raises a lot of questions about relationships within families and the self. An interesting read tho sometimes I felt trying a bit too hard to be unique. Nevertheless still a thought provoking piece with a creative take on language and form, and a really interesting and well written approach. One I’ll come back to.