Greathouse follows up
Wound from the Mouth of a Wound, a Kate Tufts Discovery Award winner, with another impressive collection focusing on the nature of desire. Recalling being “called a boy-thing with a girl
ish // manner, when I meant to be a girl / or girl-ish,” greathouse goes on to cite all the places trans people like her are prohibited (“bathrooms & airplanes, churches & young adult literature”); they explain, “I just wanted you / to future me.” The poems are frank and luscious in describing the many ways having sex satisfies them. And also how it doesn’t; greathouse, who has seizures (“the body overtaken by itself”), also finds intercourse difficult (“No study has yet considered girls like us / human enough to bother with our pain”). Yet the poems radiate a sort of joyous physicality, an appreciation of the body, and images of bonding prevail (“it’s how I hold another / body that gives mine its worth”). greathouse’s main tool, aside from rich language, is a sophisticated plunge into the etymology of words they use, showing how understanding their roots helps us understand what they describe.
VERDICT Certain to make some readers uncomfortable, and sometimes somewhat overextended, this remains remarkable poetry.
Comment Policy:
Comment should not be empty !!!