1486: from Perihelion: A History of Touch by Franny Choi

1486: from Perihelion: A History of Touch by Franny Choi
TRANSCRIPT
I’m Maggie Smith, and this is The Slowdown.
A sommelier, in short, is a wine expert. They’re someone trained in fine dining who specializes in all aspects of wine service and wine and food pairing. They take into account the components of a dish and the characteristics of a wine, and they find just the right balance.
I don’t splurge often, but when I want to celebrate an occasion, it’s a special treat to enjoy multiple courses with wine pairings. Each dish comes out, explained in detail by the server, and then the sommelier or a wine server brings the accompanying drink and explains a little about it as they pour. I love the language they use to describe the wine, words like oaky and grippy and tannic.
The work of a sommelier, like the work of a chef, is fascinating to me, because it’s creative. Changing one element in a piece of writing, or changing one ingredient in a dish or a cocktail, changes everything. The choices we make determine the experience, and there are infinite combinations we can choose from.
I’m no sommelier. I don’t have any expertise in food and wine pairings, and I don’t know much about complementary and congruent pairings. But what about poem and occasion pairings? Or song and occasion pairings? Or song and poem pairings? I think I’m pretty good at those. It’s no secret that I love making playlists — for trips, for loved ones, for creative projects. Every book I’ve written has a playlist of songs that I listened to while writing the book, full of songs that speak to the subject matter or that feel tonally aligned. It’s a book/music pairing.
Today’s poem is about the snow moon, the first full moon of February. The explanation behind the name “snow moon” is fairly straightforward: February is often the snowiest month. After reading this quiet stunner of a poem, I was inspired to turn on one of my favorite Nick Drake songs, “Pink Moon.” I highly recommend this poem/song pairing.
from Perihelion: A History of Touch
by Franny Choi
snow moon The magic where the streetlights turn the snow pink lasts only for the first night, the same way, maybe, a blanket loses track of its scent when it’s been touched by too many hands, or the way a body grays when too many feet have dragged their cigarettes and complaints through it. But for that one first night, everything cold- flecked and whispering was ours, the pink light ours, sent from some other world so we could, for a night, feel untouched. So we could feel like sugar—crumbling, and perfect for it.
"Snow Moon" by Franny Choi from SOFT SCIENCE © 2019 Franny Choi. Used with the permission of The Permissions Company, LLC on behalf of Alice James Books.


