
Surveille (Wisconsin Poetry Series
The collectionâs queer speaker is on the cusp of motherhood, vacillating between attentiveness and paranoia, surveilling her body, civic bodies, natural and political landscapes, and the child she longs to bring intoâand ultimately protect fromâthis hostile world. Roachâs poems stare into and through the truth with a blazing intensity.
âIt was breeding season, / wasnât it, and they were running from something,â writes Caitlin Roach. Surveilleâs queer speaker is on the cusp of motherhood, vacillating between attentiveness and paranoia, surveilling her body, civic bodies, natural and political landscapes, and the child she longs to bring intoâand ultimately protect fromâthis hostile world.
Exploring drone strikes, scorpion eradication, bird behavior, mating deer, ICE detainees, and family relationships, Roachâs poems stare into and through the truth with a blazing intensity. She writes, âStill, I watch / the watcher watch me watch / the man standing in front of me / peering through the crosshatch / iron mesh, waiting for bodies / beloved he knows he cannot touch / to arrive on the other side.â
Surveille is a book about people under various forms of control (self-inflicted and external), about watching and being watched (by oneself, by others, by the state), about mothering, and about the desperate search for meaning in a world that feels increasingly violent and filled with despair.
 Hold the husk.
Suck each bead out. There
are degrees of loss, speeds
at which pain travels
through the body. See,
even the rose neckâs bent. I do not
need to tell you Iâm sick. I want to
be remembered for the absence
my body made in space.
âExcerpt from âGardening, the mother gives her daughter a lesson on lossâ
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The collectionâs queer speaker is on the cusp of motherhood, vacillating between attentiveness and paranoia, surveilling her body, civic bodies, natural and political landscapes, and the child she longs to bring intoâand ultimately protect fromâthis hostile world. Roachâs poems stare into and through the truth with a blazing intensity.
âIt was breeding season, / wasnât it, and they were running from something,â writes Caitlin Roach. Surveilleâs queer speaker is on the cusp of motherhood, vacillating between attentiveness and paranoia, surveilling her body, civic bodies, natural and political landscapes, and the child she longs to bring intoâand ultimately protect fromâthis hostile world.
Exploring drone strikes, scorpion eradication, bird behavior, mating deer, ICE detainees, and family relationships, Roachâs poems stare into and through the truth with a blazing intensity. She writes, âStill, I watch / the watcher watch me watch / the man standing in front of me / peering through the crosshatch / iron mesh, waiting for bodies / beloved he knows he cannot touch / to arrive on the other side.â
Surveille is a book about people under various forms of control (self-inflicted and external), about watching and being watched (by oneself, by others, by the state), about mothering, and about the desperate search for meaning in a world that feels increasingly violent and filled with despair.
 Hold the husk.
Suck each bead out. There
are degrees of loss, speeds
at which pain travels
through the body. See,
even the rose neckâs bent. I do not
need to tell you Iâm sick. I want to
be remembered for the absence
my body made in space.
âExcerpt from âGardening, the mother gives her daughter a lesson on lossâ












