
Spanning decades and relationships, dream worlds and memories and therapy sessions, Jill Khoury’s soaring, elegiac collection earthwork (Switchback Books, 2024) invites readers into the volatile and immersive experience of grieving someone both beloved and dangerous. In Khoury’s case, that person is her mother, to whom this collection is dedicated. Through three sections, the speaker reckons with her childhood, adulthood, and the aftermath of her mother’s death. The collection is grounded in her mental return to this figure, both mythically large and emaciated in her mental and physical illness, still looming over the speaker’s days, nights, and conception of herself.
The collection begins with a prelude entitled night cultivars, in which the speaker as a child immediately demonstrates her lyric and material superpower: that of unceasing observation, dismissed by her mother. The speaker describes how,
“the fractured
clay dirt
flowered
against a red
moon
bore a
scratchblossom
all thorns
and dolor
moaned from out
a low stump
when I put my ear
to it
oh
she says
that’s just
a weed
the wind.” (Khoury 1)
Quickly, the speaker gives the reader a medley of snippets illustrating fraught exchanges with her mother and the instability of their relationship. She remembers her mother in vignettes of mental decay: she flushes her meds, ceases to eat, doesn’t want her daughter to come visit her even as she says: “my mother’s whisper i would never do anything to hurt you / but this like so many of her communiques is a secret wrapped in a half-truth” (Khoury 5).
Even in the anger sparked from this neglect, the speaker’s care for her mother transforms, but does not cease: in one poem she burns her mother’s old clothes; the next, she remarks on how,
“she is
so smaller
i just want
to hold her” (Khoury 13).
This angry tenderness and ebbing and flowing despair sucks the reader into the speaker’s complex, fearless voice with abandon.
The speaker, understandably, seeks an escape away from the all-encompassing presence of her mother, and finds it in her dreams. A motif that permeates this collection is the phrase “all aspects of the dream are aspects of the dreamer”; four poems spanning the collection bear this same title. Early on in earthwork, the speaker remembers one such dream about her mother’s mental and physical deterioration in spine-crawlingly visceral detail: “my mother is perched on the couch dying properly wrapped / like a molebeast in a baby blue blanket” (Khoury 18). She is jolted back to the present when “[her] therapist asks [her] what does dying properly mean” Khoury (18). As the daughter of a palliative care physician, I was struck by moments like these that paralleled end-of-life care. The speaker’s therapist, here, asks the foundational question of palliative care: how does one die well? And in exploring someone’s values at the end of their life, the question very quickly becomes, how does one live well? Khoury delves into this query from multiple vantage points in this collection, leaving no lead unturned as she studies her chronic illness, mental health, and survivorship of abuse along with her complicated relationship with her mother.
Through all this pain and mourning, the speaker has moments that elucidate an awareness of their own resilience – the strength needed to continue living with, and in spite of, her trauma. Khoury counters a fight brewing with her mother, who compares her garden to kindling, by asserting, “i know something about surviving fire” (39). The dream motif continues as the speaker chooses to enter her mother’s bedroom in a dream, reminding herself: “it is important to remember / i choose this in dreams you are the chooser / you have the control” (Khoury 52). Her dreams, like her poetry, like her garden, become her sanctuaries, and in this the speaker illuminates a myriad of sites of refuge from the harm she’s experienced.
In Part Three, Khoury wrenches the reader from graphic descriptions of the past to an immediately more factual tone in the present. The section’s opening poem begins, “i delivered the eulogy / otherwise she would not have had a eulogy” (47). She continues to describe, with a clear numbness of immediate grief, the barebones of transpired events: her mother’s clothes were “bagged donated / to a rural church” (Khoury 48); she leaves a voicemail matter-of-factly informing her mother that she “tried to end [herself] / with antipsychotics / & alcohol” (Khoury 49). Pivotally, too, in Part Three the speaker meets her past self instead of becoming her in memory. Rather than absorbing the self-loathing and hurt her younger self was forced to endure, the speaker bids her own goodbyes to her mother and, “[takes] the knife from [her] belt to extract / the image of the child who sits in [her] mother’s lap” (Khoury 63).
This book is not just about grief or trauma, but also where this long-lasting pain settles to live within our bodies. Khoury repeatedly reckons with what it means to relive your past with such vividness that it becomes difficult to differentiate where your memories end and the present begins. Like many memories of trauma, they sometimes cease to be memories at all, and become just a different kind of embodied experience re-lived intermittently. As the speaker describes in the present-tense an afternoon lying beside her mother on a beach, she interrupts her speech to chastise and remind herself:
“no
none of this
is happening
this happened
long ago
far away.” (Khoury 65)
By beginning to create some form of distance between her past and current self, the speaker shows us how she is able to come home to her present body.
The collection’s title, earthwork, betrays one of the speaker’s central coping strategies; noticing and nurturing the earth, a place she understands when nothing else makes sense. After a suicide attempt, she relates the difficulty in returning back to school:
“i can’t remember
the difference between
dactyl and anapest
been painting
a lot though
mostly abstracts
bees dance on the honeycomb
of my tongue
so many secrets
sickle
in my closed
mouth.” (Khoury 62)
Khoury makes sense of her turbulent world with natural imagery, as she seeks for an escape in her suicidality and encounters a different spiritual response: “i ask god to erase me please / he wants me to macerate these herbs instead / light stratifies into color” (56-57). Nature and gardens, here, become sites of creation to rival the speaker’s instinct towards self-hate and destruction. One of Khoury’s most astounding poetic talents is her ability to turn a violent verb like “macerate” to something reclamatory in the space of just a few lines. Nature rebuilds when it is destroyed, and herbs, macerated, have even more of a capacity to heal in their transformed state.
In earthwork, Jillian Khoury dives into complex and living trauma, both experienced and inherited. Through it all, she retains tenderness for the mother who both raised her and harmed her, bending over backwards to attempt to understand her in memory as she did in life. This collection’s generous meditations on generational trauma will stay with me long after closing its pale-blue cover; at turns gentle, rageful, and vastly melancholic. Khoury encapsulated this range of the mixed bag we inherit from those who have loved and harmed us as she remembers her mother: “she hands me a box of her favorite earrings / some of these are tarnished” (8).
earthwork is available from Switchback Books
Catie Macauley (they/he/she) is a transmasculine aspiring poet living and working in Boston. They study Sociology, Environmental Studies, and English at Wellesley College, where they also compete on the Wellesley Whiptails frisbee team and perform with the Wellesley Shakespeare Society. A Best of the Net 2024 Nominee, his writing has appeared in brawl lit, The Wellesley News, and the Young Writer’s Project, among other publications. In their free time, Catie enjoys boxing, re-reading A Midsummer Night’s Dream , and buying far too many books at independent bookstores – primarily the Grolier Poetry Bookshop, where they are somehow lucky enough to work.


















