It is a rare literary encounter to have the chance to read - or, in my case, listen to the audiobook version, read by the author herself - The Flower Bearers by poet, novelist and multimedia artist Rachel Eliza Griffiths.
The memoir, with an exceptional cover, is an extraordinary honest testimony of being faced with deep grief and surviving the violence of the day. The death of her mother, followed by the sudden death of her dear 17-year long friend Kamilah Aisha Moon, on the eve of her wedding. One year after, while still mourning the passing of Moon, her husband, Salman Rushdie, was the victim of a stabbing during a literary event, by a religious fanatic. Now, Rushdie was fighting for his life and she was, again, in the midsts of a drama.
Griffiths, whose poetry is deeply autobiographic and bridges mundane experiences through very observant emotional lenses, is carefully reconstructing episodes from her literary past, with Moon being her life and literary companion. It is a story of women friendship transposed into poetic prose.
Listening to Griffiths´ voice amplified this effect connecting the reader to her story. Her honest acknowledgment of her struggle with mental health over the years creates an even deeper connection.
I hope to have more time in the next weeks and months to read more by Griffiths as for me, personally, opened up so many gateways to emotional patches I´ve never know they existed. Clearly, a mission accomplished for the writer.
Rating: 5 stars






