Grace is a manner, an aesthetic of tact, but to navigate an ableist world also requires tactics. Michael Davidson has perfected a postmodern lyric whose deft shifts in tone and syntax parse a changing present in which climate crisis and social media coincide with aging and gradual deafness. His poems register how it feels to enter โthe social/as a stave of differences.โ And though they document the โcatalog ...Full description
Grace is a manner, an aesthetic of tact, but to navigate an ableist world also requires tactics. Michael Davidson has perfected a postmodern lyric whose deft shifts in tone and syntax parse a changing present in which climate crisis and social media coincide with aging and gradual deafness. His poems register how it feels to enter โthe social/as a stave of differences.โ And though they document the โcatalogue of affectโ that arises from embodied difference, they also aim to meet error and misunderstanding with generosity and crip wit. Reading Grace, Iโm reminded that โlanguage has no solitudeโ when a poet is this good.Brian Teare, author of Poem Bitten By a ManMichael Davidsonโs acclaimed work in disability studies takes a deeply personal turn in Grace, whose sharply chiseled lines and stanzas โchronicle a period of gradual hearing loss that began in the mid 1990s and continues into the present day.โ โ[W]hat is left when sound diesโ leads to what he calls โa poetics of errorโโโbig not pig, / cat not hat,โ โโAโ becomes โFโ,โ the articulation of sound in words disappearing into a โdrone [that] captures silence in its slithery net.โ Swimming in the ocean, which for years has been a regular part of Davidsonโs life on the coast of Southern California, becomes โpaddling down to the littoral . . . tuning on that low drone [that] locks the body into itself.โ That body becomes โa hollowโ in which โwords flower (follow) as if you are having a conversation with yourself.โ Other โmatter[s] of attentionโ appear in other poemsโโthe baby bombed in the hospitalโ; โMarch / . . . full of loss, first L / then T now M / their thisness / pressed between leaves / a variable lifeโ; the โalgorithm / [that] tells you what you needโ; the โmiraclesโ one sometimes gets to see in nature (โowl guarding its nest / next to the lagoon / whimbrel pecking in sandโ). All of this and so much more made present in the โhard surfaceโ of Davidsonโs language, which variously โembraces all the flaws,โ makes Grace must reading for everyone who cares about our precarious condition in the world as well the โnews,โ as Williams called poetry, โthat stays news.โStephen Ratcliffe, author of m o m e n tโBetween the motion/And the act/Falls the shadow,โ wrote T.S. Eliot long ago. In Grace Michael Davidson explores this shadowy intervening space with less drama and, in my opinion, more grace than Eliot did, looking for what connects and disconnects us. When we converse, for instance, we donโt simply exchange words. Itโs also the case that:โฆโฆโฆโฆsilencesmust be inspected for what must notbe mentioned, but consideredfor the conversation to continue.Clearly this is a tricky, delicate business. Davidson, who has experienced and adapted to severe hearing loss, knows quite a lot about inhabiting the gaps between speech and understanding, or, as he puts it,โโฆthe hiatus before the image.โ Like Creeley, he has heard โwords full of holes.โRae ArmentroutFew poets incite in me such measured quiet as Michael Davidson, who lends in this collection his signature voice to agile rumination: what does it mean to reposition oneself in regard to the materiality of language as access to that material shifts? Through descriptive engagement and lyrical associationโwhich may vibrate differently in readers who are deaf or hard-of-hearingโDavidson recounts with patience the fickle nature of sonics and the intimacies therein.Meg Day, author of Last Psalm at Sea LevelMichael Davidson fulfills the promise of โa new knowledge of realityโ: a ghostly โaudiogramโ of deafness, deftly conjuring poems of incarnate difference. His โfall into languageโ is both a failing and flailing into grace. It is raised: a social body.Charles Bernstein