Marigold and Rose / Louise Gluck New York : Picador/Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2023, ©2022 55p. |
This slim tale by poet Louise Gluck is a charming read.
Marigold and Rose are twins, infant girls who don't yet have language but have
rich inner lives. It is interested in words, language, time, identity -- sweet
and yet thoughtful, it’s also melancholic in parts.
It's a quick read, short and plainly written. But there is
so much in it, you can linger on lines and think about the deeper meaning in an
apparently simple statement. Marigold is the quieter, more thoughtful twin, who
wishes she could be appealing and worldly, like Rose. Meanwhile Rose thinks
that she is all surface appeal and wishes she could have more of an inner life
like Marigold.
Of course this is all a conceit; infants aren't pondering
the philosophical depths of an alphabet book they can't actually read yet. But
it's a lovely one, which highlights ideas of meaning and memory. Louise Gluck
has said something like, "We observe life as children, all the rest is
memory" and this is an examination of the looking part of existence. These
infants, barely into the world, observe the incomprehensible and worry about
aging, dying, loss, identity, meaning, even words themselves as a way to
capture the world.
This is a delicate read, somewhere between prose and poetry
- no plot really, more reflections and thoughts from an interior life. Is it a
short story or a novella? Not quite certain, but it is a worthwhile read from a
poet who has been reflecting on these issues her whole career.
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