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Lindsay Tuggle Lindsay Tuggle i(A117799 works by)
Born: Established:
c
United States of America (USA),
c
Americas,
;
Gender: Female
Arrived in Australia: ca. 2002
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Works By

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1 Lindsay Tuggle Reviews Stone Mother Tongue Lindsay Tuggle , 2019 single work review
— Appears in: Mascara Literary Review , December no. 24 2019;

— Review of Stone Mother Tongue Annamaria Weldon , 2018 selected work poetry

'Annamaria Weldon’s luminous fourth collection returns the poet to the archipelago of her birth.  Stone Mother Tongue begins in prehistoric Malta, where Weldon mourns the “goddesses we trample[ed]” across the centuries.  The poet guides us through shifting incarnations of her homeland, where “Recollection is mapped country folded backwards / along familiar creases” (50). Weldon’s poetry enacts a uniquely feminine divination; she calls forth a goddess oracle unbound from history, a statuary tongue unloosed from time.  Ancient relics —museumed, looted, or abandoned—are portals to haunted islands where “pre-history seems just offshore . . . time’s lost coast in stone, not words.” Weldon elegantly negotiates the fraught territory between conflicted and conflicting histories: collective and personal, traumatic and resilient, human and divine.'  (Introduction)

1 2 y separately published work icon Calenture Lindsay Tuggle , Melbourne : Cordite Press , 2018 12914102 2018 selected work poetry

'The first time I heard the word, I saw her diving. From the cliffs of Kuttawa, her long arc into the lake they flooded a town to create. A fever so verdant it calls you by name. The water was vaguely green-edged that summer. Some algal bloom, which never hindered my sister. I never jumped. Not then. Years later, the fever came for me, blind in her wake. It called me by her name.

'Poe said 'the death of a beautiful woman is, unquestionably, the most poetical topic in the world.' I don't want it to be true, but here we are. Every elegy needs an author. And then, an autopsy.

'In the decade after she died, my poetry became diagnostic, archaic, hysteric, mesmeric. This book is ossuary to a constellation of deaths, some sudden, all strange. It is also a catalogue of medical and mercurial oddities, curiosities that call forth the exquisite corpse hard at work beneath our living flesh. The echolalic duet between what is lost and what is left behind. The phantom limb. The wandering womb. The book bound in skin. The face that ghosts itself. The fever dream that ends in drowning. The writhing grace of speaking in tongues. The Holy Ghost, that only permissible husband in the unkempt dance of our girlhood. Home: our pale host to long winters and shared delusions, borne of boredom and endless grooming. The countless ways in which we coaxed our bodies into clothes and, later, coffins.

'This is what I know, now. It is never banal to watch someone unfurl.

Come in, won't you? The grass is fine.'

Source: Author's blurb.

1 Pharmaecological i "Don’t say good men are dead.", Lindsay Tuggle , 2017 single work poetry
— Appears in: Irises : The University of Canberra Vice-Chancellor's International Poetry Prize 2017 2017; (p. 88-89)
1 An Elementary Treatise on Human Anatomy i "The string is a catalyst not", Lindsay Tuggle , 2016 single work poetry
— Appears in: Cordite Poetry Review , 1 August no. 55.0 2016;
1 Rest Cure i "All are bound throat to ankle", Lindsay Tuggle , 2016 single work poetry
— Appears in: Contemporary Australian Feminist Poetry 2016; (p. 41-42)
1 Calendar / (After) Urne Burial i "content with their tender fears they deal in all newcomers", Lindsay Tuggle , Kate Middleton , 2016 single work poetry
— Appears in: Contemporary Australian Feminist Poetry 2016; (p. 16-20)
1 On Floating Bodies i "Her gutteral silhouette", Lindsay Tuggle , 2016 single work poetry
— Appears in: Tremble : The University of Canberra Vice-Chancellor's International Poetry Prize 2016; (p. 64)
1 Anthropodermic i "Asleep in sepia her coital fragility", Lindsay Tuggle , 2016 single work poetry
— Appears in: Tremble : The University of Canberra Vice-Chancellor's International Poetry Prize 2016; (p. 14-16)
1 An Elementary Treatise on Human Anatomy i "Case history:", Lindsay Tuggle , 2014 single work poetry
— Appears in: Dazzled : The University of Canberra Vice-Chancellor's International Poetry Prize 2014; (p. 92-92)
1 The Heretics’ Asylum i "Her god never condoned", Lindsay Tuggle , 2013 single work poetry
— Appears in: Contrappasso Magazine , November no. 3 2013;
1 The Bone House i "In the thralldom of debt", Lindsay Tuggle , 2013 single work poetry
— Appears in: Contrappasso Magazine , November no. 3 2013;
1 Anamnesis i "She dreamed a cemetery of glass tombs.", Lindsay Tuggle , 2012 single work poetry
— Appears in: Mascara Literary Review , June no. 11 2012;
1 The Arsonist’s Hymnal i "wake to see if the trains are still running.", Lindsay Tuggle , 2012 single work poetry
— Appears in: Mascara Literary Review , June no. 11 2012;
1 Hunting with Dick Cheney : An Elegy i "The explosion that is my face", Lindsay Tuggle , 2012 single work poetry
— Appears in: Contrappasso Magazine , August no. 1 2012;
1 Cloud Seeds i "within this cumulus milieu", Lindsay Tuggle , 2012 single work poetry
— Appears in: Contrappasso Magazine , August no. 1 2012;
1 Inflight Hospitality i "‘The only thing that", Lindsay Tuggle , 2012 single work poetry
— Appears in: Contrappasso Magazine , August no. 1 2012;
1 Where Moderns Have No Myths i "The reproduction of the eye", Lindsay Tuggle , 2012 single work poetry
— Appears in: Contrappasso Magazine , August no. 1 2012;
1 Aphasia i "Hysteria of reminiscence:", Lindsay Tuggle , 2009 single work poetry
— Appears in: Heat , no. 20 (New Series) 2009; (p. 220-221)
1 Revival i "it's quiet since", Lindsay Tuggle , 2008 single work poetry
— Appears in: Heat , no. 17 (New Series) 2008; (p. 152-153)
1 Wichita Girls i "her face glittering worn", Lindsay Tuggle , 2008 single work poetry
— Appears in: Heat , no. 17 (New Series) 2008; (p. 150-151)
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