Swollening

Jason Purcell

Image | BOOK COVER: Swollening by Jason Purcell

(Arsenal Pulp Press)

Jason Purcell's debut collection of poems rests at the intersection of queerness and illness, staking a place for the queer body that has been made sick through living in this world. Part poetic experiment and part memoir, Swollening attempts to diagnose what has been undiagnosable, tracing an uneven path from a lifetime of swallowing bad feelings - homophobia in its external and internalized manifestations, heteronormativity, anxiety surrounding desire, aversion to sex - to a body in revolt.
In poems that speak using the grammar and logics of sickness, Purcell offers a dizzying collision of word and image that is the language of pain alongside the banality of living on. Beginning by reading their own life and body closely and slowly zooming out to read illness in the world, Purcell comes to ask: how might a sick, queer body forgive itself for a natural reaction to living in a sick world and go on toward hope? In Swollening, Purcell coughs up their own poetics of illness, their own aesthetics of pain, to form a tender collection that lands straight in the gut. (From Arsenal Pulp Press)
Jason Purcell is a writer and musician from amiskwaciwaskahikan, Treaty 6 (Edmonton), where they are also the co-owner of Glass Bookshop. Swollening is their first full-length collection.

From the book

I call you
my body to me—I think
I misplaced a memory, the past behind
the wall and rotting. Gagging
on childhood. I need the sense to smell for it and then
let it grow, except
my senses are misfiring in the domestic.

From Swollening by Jason Purcell ©2022. Published by Arsenal Pulp Press.

Interviews with Jason Purcell