Category: Adults, Poetry
Language: EnglishKeywords: Family
Written by Kathy Fagan
Read by Kathy Fagan
Format: M4B
Bitrate: 128 Kbps
Unabridged
From Kingsley Tufts Award finalist Kathy Fagan comes Bad Hobby, a perceptive collection focused on memory, class, and might-have-beens.
In a working-class family that considers sensitivity a âfatal diagnosis,â how does a child grow up to be a poet? What happens when a body âmeant to bend & breedâ opts not to, then finds itself performing the labor of care regardless? Why do we think our âcommon griefsâ so singular? Bad Hobby is a hard-earned meditation on questions like theseâa dreamscape speckled with swans, ghosts, and weather updates.
Fagan writes with a kind of practical empathy, lamenting pain and brutality while knowing, also, their inevitability. A dementing father, a squirrel limp in the talons of a hawk, a âchild who wonât ever get bornâ: with age, Fagan posits, the impact of ordeals like these changes. Loss becomes instructive. Solitude becomes a shared experience. âYou think your one life preciousââ
And Bad Hobby thinksâhard. About lineage, about caregiving. About time. It paces âinside its head, gazing skyward for a noun or phrase to / shatter the glass of our locked cars & save us.â And it does want to save us, or at least lift us, even in the face of immense bleakness, or loneliness, or the body changing, failing. âDonât worry, baby,â Fagan tells us, the sparrow at her window. âWeâre okay.â
Length: 1 hr and 25 mins
Release date: 03-28-23
From Kingsley Tufts Award finalist Kathy Fagan comes Bad Hobby, a perceptive collection focused on memory, class, and might-have-beens.
In a working-class family that considers sensitivity a âfatal diagnosis,â how does a child grow up to be a poet? What happens when a body âmeant to bend & breedâ opts not to, then finds itself performing the labor of care regardless? Why do we think our âcommon griefsâ so singular? Bad Hobby is a hard-earned meditation on questions like theseâa dreamscape speckled with swans, ghosts, and weather updates.
Fagan writes with a kind of practical empathy, lamenting pain and brutality while knowing, also, their inevitability. A dementing father, a squirrel limp in the talons of a hawk, a âchild who wonât ever get bornâ: with age, Fagan posits, the impact of ordeals like these changes. Loss becomes instructive. Solitude becomes a shared experience. âYou think your one life preciousââ
And Bad Hobby thinksâhard. About lineage, about caregiving. About time. It paces âinside its head, gazing skyward for a noun or phrase to / shatter the glass of our locked cars & save us.â And it does want to save us, or at least lift us, even in the face of immense bleakness, or loneliness, or the body changing, failing. âDonât worry, baby,â Fagan tells us, the sparrow at her window. âWeâre okay.â
Length: 1 hr and 25 mins
Release date: 03-28-23