Bird Sisters
By Julia Webb
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About this ebook
'All is strange or estranged in fact, but it is articulated in poems of supple inventive concentration. In that sense Bird Sisters is a book that casts deep shadows.' – George Szirtes
Julia Webb's Bird Sistersis a surreal journey through sisterhood and the world of the family via the natural world. Fascinated by the 'otherness' of things, her poems expose places and relationships that are not always entirely comfortable places to exist. Many of them feature transformations of some kind – both real and metaphorical: a woman wears a dress of live bees or becomes a bird and family members turn into owls and sparrows.
In exploring the ways in which both adults and children are casually cruel to one another, often within a mythological framework, Julia Webb blurs the boundaries between fairy tale and reality. These families are terrifying in their complexity and dysfunction, yet utterly compelling and convincing and with dark undercurrents of humour that ensure the poems are never bleak.
Julia Webb
Julia Webb is a writer, artist, poetry tutor and editor based in Norwich. Her first two collections: Bird Sisters (2016) and Threat (2019) were also published by Nine Arches Press. Her work has been published widely in UK journals and anthologies. In 2011 she won the Poetry Society’s Stanza competition and in 2018 she won the Battered Moons poetry competition. Her poem ‘Sisters’ was highly commended in the 2016 Forward Prize.
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Book preview
Bird Sisters - Julia Webb
Sisters (part i)
i.
This sister is the bones of the outfit,
she is the stuff that keeps the body up,
she is dem bones, dem bones,
she is calcified connective tissue,
she is femur, tibia, ulna, ribs.
ii.
This sister is the perfect scrunch
of English Rose,
all delicate petal curl, subtle pinks,
she opens her smile up to the sun.
This sister is a fuzzy stamen
with a dust of pollen,
she is the heady waft of perfume
begging you to bring your face down to her,
to bring your face right down.
iii.
She is the one with the hair just-so,
the handkerchief skirt hems, the well-cut clothes,
and on birthdays she gets the family all together –
we line up for photos that never looked posed,
and how she laughs at being vegetarian
but each Christmas allowing herself a little meat.
She is the one with the dainty features, the cutesy nose
the one they look for when you enter the room,
and the way they hang on her words makes you nauseous
but you can’t say it, because she was the one
who watched out for you behind the shops and in the playground.
She is the one with the amicable divorce
and the books on cake decorating –
all those fiddly womanly things you have no patience for,
and she is the one who sat up all night in the crematorium
plaiting flowers into your mother’s hair.
iv.
This sister reads Nietzsche,
her hair is twisted into bunches like tiny horns,
she makes abstract art with fur and feathers,
she likes to collect things from gutters and pavements,
and her eyes have that sparkle you were scared of as a kid.
v.
This sister is the bee
and we are the nectar,
she is drawing us in
with her persistent buzzing,
her talk of the hive mind,
her tremble dance.
Bee Mornings
The bees that sleep inside me
fill my mind with buzz.
We are Nectar they say,
we are Wax and Cone,
we are of Bee but not of Bee.
In the morning I look at my stripes
under the covers, something strange
is taking place inside me,
my tongue has turned to fur,
my head hums like something electric.
Yet by breakfast you would never know:
I fidget the toast around the plate,
it