MY FATHER SAYS GRACE, by Donald Platt
-a review by Sarah E. Lamers
The
University of Arkansas Press, McIlroy House, 201 Ozark Avenue, Fayetteville, AR 72701; ISBN-13: 978-1-55728-837-0, 2007,
95 pp, paper, $16.00
In poetry, there are subjects which may tempt a writer to traverse into the dangerous
territory of cliche. Its snare can be difficult to avoid. Love is one such subject, so is faith and religion. Death
is another. Yet the poems in Donald Platt's My Father Says Grace find
a way into such well-traveled tropes that is anything but ordinary and far from expected. From a father's stroke,
to a mother-in-law's decline into lung cancer, even to a brother whose Down's Syndrome becomes a kind of unraveling,
these poems wade unabashedly into the discomfort, into the deterioration of both mind and body in a manner that is impassioned,
painstakingly real, and beautifully loving.
At the center of this brilliant collection is the speaker's
father who, despite his declining physical and mental health, floods the lives of those around him with small moments of
pleasure while showing those around him what it means to live, to learn, and to thrive amid trial. As readers we struggle
beside this speaker whose mix of joy for his own health and unblemished future and nagging guilt and sense of helplessness
commingle as the father's inevitable death looms. The opening poem "Sizzling Happy Family" -- titled
after a Chinese dish -- introduces the names and faces that My Father Says Grace
so lovingly depicts with an apropos metaphor: here is a family, stricken with illness, with the stress of caring for one
another, who are still blessed with startling gifts: moments of pure bliss such as the delight obtained from the suppleness
of a "steaming platter of smells and colors / harvested from the earth / and ocean" or, in other poems, from aimlessly
batting around a child's balloon, from a Galli-Curci opera that bursts forth from an antique Victrola, or from the double
rainbow that floods the sky as the speaker's departs after visiting his father in a nursing home. This is a family
who radiates gratitude, despite their pain and sorrow. As "Sizzling Happy Family" closes, the speaker begs
his aging parents to "Order coffee and pears with rum. Have them flame it. / Don't leave the table. Not
yet." This heart wrenching plea sets the stage for the poems that are to unfold in the subsequent pages, inviting
us to stay, to sit, to take in the rich sustenance still to come.
What's surprising -- and often creates a
troubling richness in the poems -- is the sense of familiarity with death that hovers. In "Turtle with the World
on Its Back" the speaker's burden (his guilt for being alive) battles his deep desire to relish in life as he vows
to "go out / in our backyard, / sit in the rusted iron lawn chair, and get good and shit-faced / under the harvest /
moon" while his mother-in-law dies of lung cancer. He finds solace in the myth of the Bolivian turtle, a sandstone
carving over which farmers pour tequila before offering up a prayer. As readers and witnesses we must bear the weight
of death just as the speaker for whom these poems are prayers must; indeed the poems serve as prayers for mercy, for painless
dying, but also prayers of joy, prayers in praise of a life and a liveliness that endures in the form of a young daughter
turning cartwheels across the kitchen linoleum to teach the speaker ". . . another / way of walking / this weighted
world" ("Cartwheels"). Indeed, the collection is much more than homage to the father, to his and the
mother's failing health, (as well as the many other deaths that surround the speaker) but also a plea for grace, for
acceptance of what is to come. What also works well is the form -- tercets whose lines vary drastically in length, with the
first and third or second line wildly indented -- which mimics the unease, conveys the off-kilter instability present in
many of the collection's themes. Indeed, these poems create a dizzying sense of imbalance, of that tightrope-walk-without-a-net
sensation that death and dying force each of us to reckon with. The collection is not divided into sections and poems
are arranged so that the father's illness ensues as the collection unfolds -- an arrangement that is fitting as the
speaker bemuses life's unwinding and descent toward a stopping point.
In the end, these poems are poems of
loss, yes, and perhaps a means of coping, of course, but also poems of assurance, poems of rare hope. In the final
poem, as the speaker descends onto the tarmac of an Indianapolis airport, he pictures the next moment and the next: "I will walk along the moving
walkway to claim my baggage and continue on / into what’s left of the late / daylight. I will follow the black-and-white
signs that say to all of us travelers / not "Come unto me / all ye that travail," but only "This way to Ground
Transport."
And we sigh, a little sadder, a little less innocent, less sheltered from the pain
of death, a little more vulnerable and scarred, but all the more resilient and certainly grateful. All the more comforted.
Sara
E Lamers' collection A City Without
Trees was recently published by March Street Press. She received an MFA in Poetry
from Purdue University, and her work has appeared in journals such as The MacGuffin, Ellipsis, Slant, and Hubbub. She lives in a Detroit, MI suburb where she teaches and writes.