About this item
Highlights
- Caroline Hagood takes the reader on a wild ride, using surreal stories to process the recent death of her father.
- Author(s): Caroline Hagood
- 116 Pages
- Biography + Autobiography, General
Description
Book Synopsis
Caroline Hagood takes the reader on a wild ride, using surreal stories to process the recent death of her father. She mourns by making language work as a time machine to go back and let her father live again, bending space and time to make a place for him, if only in this book that is, above all, a séance. Death and Other Speculative Fictions is for anyone who is grieving the loss of a loved one and searching everywhere for answers.
Review Quotes
Caroline Hagood's vibrant, surprising prose poems speculate on the nature of human connection and loss with astonishing, understated force.
Idra Novey
In the aftermath of her father's death, Caroline Hagood turns to a steady diet of speculative fiction for solace. In this haunting sequence of prose poem meditations, she draws on sources as rich as Charles Yu, Kurt Vonnegut, Madeleine L'Engle, and filmmaker George Miller to construct an alternate mythology to help process her grief. One is gripped by the vulnerability, the raw tenderness of her voice, yet at the same time inspired by its provocations. Hagood shows how the speculative imagination, rather than a mode of escape, is a powerful tool for understanding the real-even rewriting it. "It's by way of the fabrications, the coming at it from outlandish angles ... that we can really see how things are here on earth and how they need to change." This book charts the road between life and death with furious creativity and vision.
Elaine Equi
Death and Other Speculative Fictions is a gorgeous tribute, a survival diary, a love letter, an ode to a father, to speculative fiction, to time, and to life. It cobbles together from real and imaginary places and the thresholds in between, a means to think about the unthinkable, and to go on with the impossible and beautiful task of living in a world that is both flooding and on fire, while letting go of those we love most, and eventually ourselves. It is full of grief, wonder, awe, hope and love. I was so moved, and my world was expanded by this book. Like Fusiosa's mechanical arm, it is a thing of beauty, born out of loss, pain and necessity.
Ananda Lima
In this beautiful and devastating essay in poems, Caroline Hagood's voice is fully alive, witty, searching and razor-sharp. What is so unique about this book is how she balances vivid descriptions of 21st century life with searing questions about the relationship between grief and speculative fiction. By reminding the reader how strange everyday life has become and how quotidian science fiction can feel, she reinvigorates hybrid writing, bringing a new liveliness and incision to the genre. An instant classic.
Joanna Fuhrman
Have you looked into the eye of death lately? If you are not ready to do so, no worries, Caroline Hagood has done it for you. In Hagood's new collection, Death And Other Speculative Fictions: An Essay In Prose Poems, you will find a hauntingly thorough scanning on what it means to lose a parent in a 21st Century vernacular that engages Furiosa, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Blade Runner 2049, and Kurt Vonnegut. For all that we might know, medically and scientifically, about what happens to our bodies when we die, Hagood wants to know more about the plane where death has no meaning and she means to find it. In this new work, Hagood becomes "a student of time, space, creativity and sorrow" so that we may get a glimpse of the beyond.
Jiwon Choi