In Case of Loss
Lutz Seiler
'I have loved reading these little essays and autobiographical stories written in a style that seems to retain some of the poet's infinite patience and respect before language whilst surrendering fully to the descriptive clarity of linear prose. Seiler is in his element when describing other's and his own processes and methods of writing poetry, ‘a complex, labyrinthine mechanics’ that may unfold over several years. In these pieces, the poet's extraordinary care for the nuances of words and phrases doubles up as an unclaimed ethical stance of how to gently attend to objects and materials, how to inhabit landscapes, places and their past, and how to make a place, entangling the care-taking gestures of culture and agriculture in the widest sense. Most memorably so, when literally pickling the fragments of cut-up poems in jars to keep for some lucky day.’ — Swen Steinhauser, Jot Bookshop & Journal