| In
his third collection, My Father Says Grace, Donald Platt
combines elegy with verse of larger historical allusion and reference.
At the center of the book stand poems detailing a father’s
stroke and slowly developing Alzheimer’s disease and how it
affects one family. An extended meditation on a mother-in-law’s
dying provides counterpoint to elegies for more public figures like
Walt Whitman and Janis Joplin.
The private
life in “the valley of the shadow of death” often gets
juxtaposed with explicitly political verse. One of these poems records
the racially charged conversations in a small southern town’s
Amazing Grace Beauty Salon. Another describes a Vietnam protestor,
famously photographed while sticking flowers in an MP’s gun
barrel, alongside images from his later life as a transvestite.
The poems tend
to find themselves in the midst of crisis, historical or personal.
They yearn for “transport” and strive “to be ‘carried
across,’ away, out, toward, back into / / some new country
/ where the soul improvises, croons scat to itself alone.”
“This
is a book of the highest lyric ambitions. Almost every poem, however
plain-spoken its subject, sets itself challenges of language and
order which are met head on. On almost every page there is a marvelous
to-and-fro between darkness of loss—a father’s approaching
death, a brother’s vulnerability—and the exuberance
of language, the sheer eloquence of organization which are no less
than their due. These are wonderful poems; they make superb, wrenching
reading.”
—Eavan Boland, author of Outside History: Selected Poems,
1980–1990 and Domestic Violence
“Donald
Platt’s poems are fearless and generous aria-narratives, each
distilling complex essences into a single, telling scene; through
their attentive particularities, universal colors emerge. The abiding
affirmation in Donald Platt’s work is that whatever exists
must be made welcome and known. The result is an optimistic book,
full of compassion, interest, and sheen, in an age when an unblended
optimism is much needed.”
—Jane Hirshfield, author of Given Sugar, Given Salt and
After
“Grief-struck and world-adoring, these
poems—in their gorgeous and distinctive swelling and contracting
tercets—say grace for a family struggling with a father's
stroke and dementia, a brother's Down syndrome, a mother-in-law's
terminal cancer. My Father Says Grace constructs its layer
on layer of elegy in a fugue-like structure, with tenderness, humor,
and startling intimacy. Platt's poems move beyond the personal circumstances
of illness, loss, and proleptic grief toward something like an autobiographical
metaphysics, meditating unflinchingly on a world of aging, death,
and loss and saying, in its own devastating way, yes and amen.”
--Bruce Beasley, author of Lord Brain and The Corpse
Donald
Platt is an associate professor of English at Purdue University.
His previous collections, Fresh Peaches, Fireworks, & Guns
and Cloud Atlas, were published by Purdue University Press
as winners of the Verna Emery Poetry Prize. He is a recipient of
the “Discovery”/The Nation Prize, a fellowship from
the National Endowment for the Arts, the Center for Book Arts’
Poetry Chapbook Prize, and two Pushcart Prizes. His poems have appeared
in many magazines and journals, including The New Republic,
Nation, Paris Review, Poetry, Kenyon
Review, Georgia Review, Virginia Quarterly Review,
Field, Iowa Review, Southwest Review,
and Southern Review, and have been anthologized in The
Best American Poetry 2000 and 2006. He lives with his wife,
the poet Dana Roeser, and their two daughters in West Lafayette,
Indiana.
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