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The Hot Garment of Love is the first book of poetry
from Brooklyn-based poet and performer Elizabeth Reddin.
Elizabeth Reddin was born
in Torrance, California at the Little Company of Mary Hospital;
in 1993 she moved to New York City. She plays music in a story
band called Legends, with Raquel Vogl and James Loman, and teaches
GED classes. Her work has been published in The Brooklyn Rail
as well as in UDP's newspaper New York Nights and
poetry journal 6x6. Please write to her at elizabethreddin
[AT] gmail.com.
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"This book is a filmic immersion in the sensorium of a being
seeking to understand its incarnation in the body of a
girl. The girl's struggle with her consciousness and her
search for some stable ground of reality reads like a lyric
existential detective novel. Exquisite descriptions, observations,
and meditations are subjected to multiple, even contradictory
interpretations, and the narrative arises from tactile
linkages that announce themselves almost subliminally,
rather than being predetermined. Each phrase, each paragraph
tells a little story, and in the space between them Reddin
generously makes room for the reader's own storehouse of
experiences to interact. Oh sure, there're anxiety, terror,
shame, horror, confusion, and the occasional bloodbath
mixed in with the shockingly beautiful images, but Reddin's
touch is so light that coming along for the ride inside
her mind is pure pleasure. Basically, this is the only
book I want to read right now."
—Laurie Weeks
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