ABOUT THIS BOOKAfter the Afterlife explores the zone between language and spirit. It is a book of inner and outer boundaries: of blockades, of tunnels, of wormholes. Where does our consciousness come from, and where is it going, if anywhere? With a nimble blend of wit, whimsy, and erudition, Hummer’s poems assay the border that the shaman is forced to cross to wrestle with the gods, which is the same border the mystic yearns to broach, and the ordinary human stumbles over while doing laundry or making lunch—where questions of identity melt in the white heat of Being:
which is like trying to teach
The cat to waltz, so much awkwardness, so many tender
advances, and I’m shocked when it actually learns,
When it minces toward me in a tiny cocktail gown, offering a martini,
asking for this dance, insisting on hearing me refuse
To reply, debating all along, in the chorus of its interior mewing, who
are you really, peculiar animal, who taught you to call you you.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
I. Desert
Fugue in D Minus
First Person
House
My Daughter’s Passport
Recovered Lives
In a Small Park with Bench, Jacaranda, and Bird’s Skull
In Utah
Impervious Blue
Everyday Metaphysics
Glass Ceiling
Dove
Prehistoric
Heraclitus
Didactic
The Morning Mail
Wolf
Kerf
Architect
Minutiae
Fisher Cat
Sky Burial
II. River
Water
My Voice
As for the Housefly
Ansel Adams on the Moon
Pub with Magnificent Paneling and Terrible Chairs
Willow
Nobody
Whiteness
Lost Sock
Anger Management
Gazehound
Solitaire
Halo
Tinfoil Boat
Centipede
Hexagram with No Changing Lines
Snail
Salt
Vulture
Beloved
Fossils
Constitutional
Antiquities
Letter to Heraclitus
As for Enlightenment
Playlist
The Flower at the End of the World
After the Afterlife
Acknowledgments