3/5 stars
What's it about? In this hybrid work of poetry, memoir, and gospel, Oliveira proffers a biblical retelling from the perspective of “the disciple whom Jesus loved.” Let me tell you: Jesus is horny.
How’d I find it? The staff recommendations shelf at Powell’s strikes again!
Who will enjoy this book? Those who relished On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous by Ocean Vuong will appreciate Dayspring’s sensuality and Oliveira’s way with language.
What stood out? Dayspring is an ambitious book, inventing its form as it spools out in fragments of existing texts, Bible verse, poems, and prose. The story follows no clear chronology, but that matters little—Dayspring deals in mysteries greater than time. Oliveira explores faith, fate, and identity in a gritty love story haunted by intolerance and violence. Our speaker moons over a charming and unabashedly queer Jesus character (whose dialogue is printed in a commanding red), knowing that his inevitable death makes a future impossible. The many sex scenes read real, though phrases like “god’s seed” and “your liquid communion” veer into corny territory. Oliveira includes no references to explain the many allusions to history, mythology, religion, and pop culture that pepper his pages. You get it or you don’t.
Which line made me feel something? “I know how horrible it is to have history notice you out of the corner of its eye”