Title | : | Side Effects May Include Strangers (Volume 55) (The Hugh MacLennan Poetry Series) |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | |
ISBN | : | 0228003571 |
ISBN-10 | : | 9780228003571 |
Language | : | English |
Format Type | : | Paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 96 |
Publication | : | First published October 22, 2020 |
Side Effects May Include Strangers (Volume 55) (The Hugh MacLennan Poetry Series) Reviews
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Every time I read a collection of poetry that I love, I think, I should read more poetry like THIS.
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A beautiful collection of poems that convey how hard the articulation of pain can be. I just keep going back to some of the poems, this book will stay with me for sure.
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Dominik Parisien’s Side Effects May Include Strangers is a necessary and insightful examination of pain, and its troubled articulation in language. It counters conventional and ableist attitudes towards the body with defiant strength and debunking of myths. “I like to fuck in protest of this body.” from “AFTER CONVULSING IN PUBLIC” is probably my favourite line from the book and I repeat it like a mantra sometimes to get me through. The book is an inclusive, compassionate gathering of bodies in pain, queer bodies, bisexual bodies, and an empowering celebration of othered bodies.
Dominik will be a guest on The Small Machine Talks in late June. -
Wow, what an incredible collection of poetry. This book made me really happy that poetry exists and that humans have the capacity to appreciate it.
This book is exactly as described in the blurb, an incredible mediation on disability, human vulnerability, and the knife of pain. Some standout poems for me included: "Let us for a moment call this pain by other words," "Bilingual pathways," "With Apologies to Those with Congenital Analgesia," "A portrait of the Monster as an Artist," "Card Game with Disabled Friends," and "Hospital Time."
This is definitely on my "recommend" list and I'm sure I'll be giving a few copies out at this time next year. -
The Hugh MacLennan Poetry Series from MQUP has been invaluable in recent years publishing a range a voices in Canadian poetry. Dominik Parisien's disability poetics in "Side Effects May Include Strangers" is an excellent example. Amongst other issues, these poems speak to disability, aging, hospitalization, sexuality and language, to name a few. I found these poems mature and evolved. In most cases, the poetry is brief and accessible, making it especially useful to recommend to those looking to better understand their own experience.
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A truly perfect collection that I couldn't put down. Parisien is a magician with words.