Description
Remote Control
by Laura Esther Sciortino
The work in this collection is a practice in ordinary love, both longing for and celebrating connection. Here, we may partake in reading as if a friend speaks to us directly. This friend that—despite mistakes and overreaching—invests herself with unabashed earnestness in the greenest of hope, imagination, freedom, beginner’s mind, surrender, and renewal.
Enjoy a Video of Laura Reading from the Book:
Early Praise for Remote Control:
Adopting many guises, the speakers of Laura Sciortino’s smashing new chapbook Remote Control at times give advice, provide witness, make prayers, lament, gossip, agitate and soothe. The mix includes small invitations, such as “Swell,” whose lyrical sentences entangle gestures domestic and marine, and the dense canopy of “Green,” whose lush prose block sways with need and rebirth. Sciortino suggests her mission and method here in “Not My Last Words,” warning, But my work is not / to tell/ My work / my love is to show.
—Ed Skoog, Author of Travelers Leaving for the City
With sass and swagger, with spunky outspokenness, with humble wonder, Laura Sciortino offers us her debut book of poems. In this collection where paying attention is a kind of love, Sciortino’s work finds its own easy place / a moggy right place / clear as water / old as sunlight.
—Paulann Petersen, Oregon Poet Laureate Emerita
Sciortino’s poetry Remote Control opens up to the vulnerable self with wit, memorial, potency, and song. Alternatively commanding and beguiling these poems speak to the lyricism of sexual attraction and attrition, moving with a shining intelligence through the fragile units of the family and the powerful bonds of friendship and marriage. Sciortino places her work at the center of lived experience, she has a fantastic eye for our embodied metaphors in pockets, remotes, and drill press. We read to know a life other than our own. These poems are a delightful introduction to Sciortino’s perceptive modern vision, through the lens of a wondering and generous talent.
—Merridawn Duckler, author of Idiom, Interstate, Misspent Youth and It’s a Wonder
In Laura Sciortino’s debut chapbook, Remote Control, her lyrically adventurous, playful, and irreverent poems offer wisdom on navigating the human condition. Like the mall vending machine where, at 13, she inserted one dollar and my cursive / for handwriting analysis, Sciortino’s poems dispense elegant, idiosyncratic advice mixed with the fruits of her own loving and astute attention.
It’s better to show than to say she writes in “Advice for a Young Woman Looking for Love” and show she does, through dazzling images and skillful wordplay. With wit and insight, she explores the vivid and mundane moments that make up a life, from postpartum muck, slipped condom funk, to being certain as a fiery coal, purple hot and set to cook, to learning to relax in a moggy right place / clear as water/old as sunlight, all the way to death and beyond.
[M]y work is not/to tell / My work / my love is to show, to point, to offer as gift Sciortino writes in “Not My Last Words.” And what a gift this book is to all who read it.
—Rebecca Jamieson, author of The Body of All Things
About the Author
Laura Esther Sciortino writes poetry, fiction, and lyric essay. Her work has appeared in The Comstock Review, Muse/A Journal, great weather for MEDIA’s Escape Wheel Anthology, Dadakuku, The Flying Dodo, and Unleash Lit. Along with her husband, son, and their three affable cats, Laura lives in Portland, Oregon.
To learn more and get in touch, please visit LauraEstherSciortino.com.
Mahsa Darabi –
I was so excited to receive this book of poems in my mailbox. They say not to judge a book by it’s cover…this is the exception! The beautiful and thoughtful illustration mirrors what’s inside, words rich with wit and wonder. Perfect gift to share ❤️
Amy Chamberlain –
I’m not exaggerating when I say this collection of poems made me swoon! Warning: I don’t recommend devouring them all of them at once. Each one is so rich, it would feel a bit gluttonous; they are far too rich and even more so on re-reading.
mila –
Lush and vibrant like a walk through the woods. A variety of poignant moments, quiet conversations and beautiful vignettes. Love each moment that has been captured within these pages.
Mila –
I am in love with the poems in this book. A blend of quiet conversations, rich and vivid descriptions, poignant vignettes, and so much more. Will be a collection I can see coming back to time and time again.
Susan Rankin –
I find Laura Sciortino’s book, Remote control, the very kind of poetry I like, full of turns, breaks, and mystery, nearly abstract yet accessible. Her voice is intimate, easy, and enticing, ever surprising and energetic, and fully transcendent at the same time. I don’t usually read a book through in one sitting. In this case I hadn’t even taken the time to sit down. I did not want to stop!
Lawrence –
Remote Control, by Laura Sciortino, is a delightfully rich and generous collection of poetry that gives and gives. I love it and recommend it with all my heart.
Janet Steward –
Such perception of life and its twists and turns all presented with lush sound and rhythm. Loved this book.