romeri's review against another edition

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challenging emotional hopeful inspiring reflective slow-paced

5.0

Might be my favourite poetry book ever — it raises the bar for poetry books for me so much. 
But you already know the myth: Rape
that made the body punishment for itself. 
— “Medusa with the Head of Perseus “ (1)
Such is how it opens.
Wound from the Mouth of a Wound powerfully confronts gender, ablelism, sexual violence, and more. It intimately weaves tales intertwined with the poet’s own identity as a disabled, transgender woman. 
I’m misdiagnosed—bipolar this time—then,
three days later, my grandmother is diagnosed with cirrhosis & isn’t
this exactly what we mean when we call family by the word blood
— “Heirloom” (22)
As someone who struggles with medical issues, I resonate with the book’s images of phlebotomy and white hospital walls, and I appreciate its discourse on disability. As a cisgender woman, some of the book’s portrayal of womanhood I relate to, while others broaden my scope of what womanhood can embody. I am grateful to be able to briefly share a vastly different womanhood in torrin a greathouse’s words. 
We search for a beginning to this story & find only a history of breakage 
x-rays cannot explain. Some girls are not made, but spring from the dirt
— “Abecedarian Requiring Further Examination Before a Diagnosis Can Be Determined (50)
The book opens with the body — “what is an ouroboros but a body, or a story, without a beginning or an end” (2). At its end, I find myself standing in front of a mirror with the book held in front of my chest, so as to read the last poem’s horizontally flipped words — “but look, here it is, real / & irrefutable” (61). Like an ouroboros, a body, it completes itself. The book might have ended but disabled, queer people’s struggles with their identity goes on. This books reminds us that we are beautiful. 

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elliotvanz's review against another edition

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challenging dark emotional reflective sad medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? N/A
  • Strong character development? N/A
  • Loveable characters? N/A
  • Diverse cast of characters? N/A
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? N/A

3.0

Visceral, raw, and deeply personal. Greathouse's poetry is full of striking and arresting imagery. The poems in this collection trace over the themes of violence and the body. Particularly a disabled body, and a trans body. This collection is a defiant scream into the darkness and I'm glad I read it.

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