A Catalog of Future Mercies
“Tender and exacting.”—Diana Arterian, Literary Hub
The grasses stilled in their ghosts. I cut the roots. Father cautions me
against discarding them in our flower beds—invasive species
are insistent. In vases, the prairie smells of drowned air, calcifies
the glass, rots overnight, and insists we scry the effluvium
for our morning prayer. Withered stamen, balding ovaries—how
do her petals withstand fists of storm and wind? I remove the death
and change the water, unable to discern her kind of thirsting.
—From “Invasive Species”
Upcoming Events
Serena Chopra reading and in conversation with Carolina Ebeid about A CATALOG OF FUTURE MERCIES at Tattered Cover
Praise
“These poems rock across the page with a rhythm so sharp I heard drums reading them. The way she uses space on the page, and her timing and language, will break you open, make you tender in ways only a queer poet can.”—Katie Lee Ellison, The Stranger
“The feminine in Chopra’s work is robust and tenacious; it is within this strength that mercy roots and, later in the collection, rises. . . . An arresting account.”—Karen Sherk Chio, West Trade Review
“Serena Chopra is an orb weaver connecting generations-old fault lines in India with the roots of the grasses in Colorado prairies. These lines, pages, images comprise a glittering web. . . . It is heartbreaking to witness and in doing so, I found that I, too, learned to braid hope alongside the speaker.”—Diana Khoi Nguyen
“Swelling with sumptuous eros, Serena Chopra’s poems offer us a new way to understand the queer, femme body coming into gorgeous, gristled collision with familial history. A Catalog of Future Mercies guides us out of hardened habits of witness and into fuller, more daring compassion.”—Divya Victor