THE FACEBOOK OF THE DEAD by Valerie Laws
My new poetry collection (published by Red Squirrel Press, cover design Gerry Cambridge) |
Some of my facebook friends are dead, as are some of my friends’ adult children or close friends on facebook. Many of us think of facebook as great for keeping in touch, meeting people, sharing photos, networking and marketing our work as authors. Social media has other perhaps less expected roles. My new poetry collection, my 4th, and 13th published book, THE FACEBOOK OF THE DEAD launches officially on 4th November. The title poem in my book is a meditation on this, and a tribute to a brilliantly talented young friend and writer, Lee Halpin, who died tragically at the age of 26. Here is the poem.
THE FACEBOOK OF THE DEAD
In life we
leave the dead behind. On Facebook
They
gallop along with us, like racehorses
Whose
jockeys have been jettisoned. Like you,
Your life
cut short but not your timeline, though
Your
relationship status, life events, favourite
Films and
books will never change again.
We go out
without you on your birthday then
Write on
your wall to tell you about it as if
You can
read our words on some virtual
Laptop
though you can’t reply. We tag you
As if you
can feel it, feel us thinking of you,
Remembering
that night, yes that one, LOL!
One posts
to tell you he’s saved your number
On a new
phone, as if you can see his message
But he
can’t text you - it’s complicated.
We tell
you where you are. Resting in peace,
You ‘Rip’,
but with us in spirit, here beside us,
No,
watching from above; sleeping with the angels
But no,
you’re giving them merry hell up there, I mean
What are
you like! We gift you the greed of our grief
As boys
compete to be your bezzie mate, the worst hurt;
Girls line
up to be your widow, claim the most kisses.
Scrolling
down the papyrus of your page I travel
Back in
time through the confused, incredulous
Comments
as your updated status spread: dead.
Many saw
it on Facebook first, I at second hand
Seeing her
face drain white as she looked at her phone
As if
charging it with her blood, a transfusion too late.
Go back
far enough, down, down, suddenly it’s your voice
Speaking,
your last comments which you didn’t know would
Be your
last. A bit crack, a bit banter, irony, witty put-downs,
RIP
Richard Griffiths, plans for the future, all four days of it.
Your
cheeky profile pic pops up among my friends, weighing
On my
heart each time I catch your eye, and if I could,
I’d
unfriend Death for you, report him for abuse, the troll
Who poked
you, who is ‘following’ us all, block him for good.
(‘Rip’: as well as a common misspelling of RIP, rip is
a Tyneside word for a lively, mischievous lad)
Dealing with losses such as bereavement, or as in my case also disability, comes in many forms. Postmortem photography in the 1800s when so many children died, and baby doll 'reburying' nowadays, for example: and Facebook has become another way of coping, especially for the young. Facebook seems to leave the timelines of the dead open, providing a familiar consoling 'grave' to visit any time, in place of the traditional churchyard stone. It's a practical help for the bereaved who can contact huge numbers of friends and extended family to pass on information about funerals, memorials etc instead of having to make countless phone calls when they are suffering acutely.
'Reborn' baby doll, custom crafted for maximum realism. |
More about the book from the back cover:
‘Laws manages to be heartfelt without seeming overly sentimental, and is witty without being irreverent.’ The Economist
Valerie Laws’ thirteenth book combines poems of pathology and loss, speed-dating tortoises, baking scones for Eminem, haiku sprayed on beachballs, and passionate polemic in more of her signature ‘compassion, neuroanatomical detail, explicit eroticism and black humour’ (Susan Standring, editor of Gray’s Anatomy).Many prize-winning & commissioned poems are included, some having featured in major exhibitions, anthologies, stage productions or on BBC TV.
‘Brilliant. …I came as a skeptic and left oddly impressed…rather wonderful combination of words’ Griff Rhys Jones, BBC2, Why Poetry Matters, Water’s Bright Words beachball haiku.
I'm planning a launch party in a really cool Newcastle art and music bar, MSA, with guitar, singing, performance, film installations, cocktails and wine, on 4th November, and then lots more events will follow. I hope some of you will come along to my launch readings in various places over the next year, and I’m still promoting this year’s crime novel THE OPERATOR. See my website for dates and places.
THE FACEBOOK OF THE DEAD is available in paperback from my publisher Red Squirrel Press, or from inpress books, or from me at events and readings. Its three immediate predecessors, two crime and one poetry, are on Kindle as indie books, and I intend to do the same for this one, despite the nightmare of formatting poetry, especially in unorthodox forms.
STOP PRESS: my second thriller, THE OPERATOR, is on special sale this weekend, at 99p/99c, to celebrate the new book and as part of the Awesome Indies new website launch, which will be here with great sale prices and giveaways this weekend. Info on Facebook too.
See my newly revamped Amazon author page here for information about my books
Follow me on Twitter @ValerieLaws
Find me on Facebook
Check out my Pinterest boards which I’ll be updating soon to include the new book.
Comments
And of course I'll buy your book.
xxx