Room Magazine

Whatever, Iceberg by Tara-Michelle Ziniuk

- JIAQING WILSON-YANG

If a collection of poems can be a page-turner, then Tara-Michelle Ziniuk’s third poetry collection, Whatever, Iceberg, Whatis just that. ever, Iceberg chronicles an all-too-familiar queer romance interwoven with polyamory, single parenting, chronic pain, poverty, and aging. Despite the specificit­y of Ziniuk’s writing, the collection remains relatable for anyone who has ever been in a badly timed romance or burned by a lover. The book avoids narrow identity-based writing while still exploring themes that spill out of queer life. In Whatever, Iceberg, Ziniuk evokes the undulating emotions of a lover who is made to feel secondary to another—more prioritize­d—romance. In “First Thursday,” Ziniuk describes feeling as a romantic placeholde­r: “You bring me temporary tattoos of roses when you return from your trip. / You tell me to close my eyes and apply one when I do. In another city, you partner / inks her arm in needles and blood. Outlines of roses rise from her pale skin. I won’t / know this until months later. My face flushes, / twice.” Ziniuk’s speaker feels cherished, and then embarrasse­d, after realizing another lover has been permanentl­y marked while her own tattoo will wash away in a few days. The knowledge that the relationsh­ip explored throughout Whatever, Iceberg will inevitably fail looms over the collection. Ziniuk offers the reader heartbreak­ing

metaphors and snapshots laying out the slow crumbling of the love affair. Describing a moment of quiet intimacy, she gives us vivid images of the fragility and the tenderness between the speaker and her ex-lover: “Sun-bleached brown / wicker snapping between our fingers, / our fingers intertwine­d like wicker about to snap.” Ziniuk uses the metaphor of an iceberg to describe many things, perhaps most strikingly the emotions of her ex-lover. The title of one poem, “I Have Never Been an Iceberg” could have been a back cover blurb for the book. Whatever, Iceberg is a beautiful, messy, insightful descriptio­n of a lover who admits nothing about themselves, written by a lover who admits everything. Ziniuk captures the joy and frustratio­n—diving into both physical and emotional pain—that comes with loving someone who is doing a terrible job at loving you back. She aptly displays the complexity of the situation as both deeply enticing and repellent. Ziniuk gives of the gift of a true response to false love. jiaqing wilson-yang

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