Debbie Lim was born in Sydney. Her poems have appeared in numerous anthologies including regularly in the Best Australian Poems series (Black Inc.), Contemporary Australian Poetry and Contemporary Asian Australian Poets (both Puncher & Wattmann) as well as journals such as Cordite, Mascara, Island and Magma (UK). Her prizes include the Rosemary Dobson Award and she was commended in the Poetry Society UK’s 2013 National Poetry Competition. Her chapbook is Beastly Eye (Vagabond Press). She is working on a full-length collection.
The Year of Contagion
In times of virus each cough hangs visible, a dark afterthought. Every touch leaves its tingling on the skin—
Still air can turn treacherous. Better whipping winds. It remains unofficial whether tears are effective transmitters. Certainly coalescence: they keep urging us
to move on. We wear our days with a new caution, learn different ways of caring. Strangely naked, riddled with porosities, we trail microclimates like small habitable clouds. Our peripheries burn.