Cut Side Down

Cut Side Down

A review of Cut Side Down by Jessi MacEachern

Published on March 12, 2025

Like Fugue Body, Jessi MacEachern’s Cut Side Down spans different time periods and voices. The work takes inspiration from Virginia Woolf’s Orlando, a story of a time-travelling poet who entertains multiple romantic partners through multiple centuries. As in Orlando, the speaker toggles between their desires for formality and frippery, and the decision to reveal or conceal these desires. The collection opens: “there are women wearing / ruffled underpants just behind my eyes.” 

Cut Side Down
Jessi MacEachern

Invisible Publishing
$9.99
paper
128pp
9781778430596

Though exploratory and wide-ranging, the work is best when it’s rooted, as in the poems from the final section, which deal with a rural childhood on Prince Edward Island. Here, rhyming couplets and references to “child-mad women” conjure a downhome Macbeth:

You show me

The dirt drove. The woman-child mad

The damp poof. Radish halves

Greens soaked in vinegar. Profound sound

Strong between 

Could the Bard himself have come up with the amazing sonic description “snapping dirt-streaked asparagus”? Underpinning the collection is the sense that there is something both thrilling and deviant about putting these sounds and feelings into words: “Words / —sex, garments, death—turn to ash in the mouth. / But we thrill in the deceit!”mRb

Frances Grace Fyfe has a Master's degree in English from Concordia University.

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