Wendy Mnookin

WHAT HE TOOK

Critical Comments


"WHAT HE TOOK is an elegy to the father Wendy Mnookin lost to an automobile accident when she was a child. It is also a book of passage, of her journey from that day, stranded in a field, to an adulthood informed by that day. In the course of the book, Mnookin attempts something highly difficult--she assumes the persona of a two-year-old. And she succeeds. This collection, this whole, is rich in unpretentious, lyrical poems."
--Lola Haskins

"This is a fascinating book, and a first-rate work of art."
--John Vitale



From The Book


"Map"

No matter what happens next
I want to remember
steam from an opened thermos of tea,
the smell of bananas,
a fold in the map through the center of Ohio.

You were two, you don't remember--

My father's glasses are falling forward on his
nose.
He hums, off key, to the radio.
My mother's cheek is creased from sleep.

And the clothes, pressed
into the secrecy of suitcases.
I want to remember the clothes.


Selected Works

Poetry
THE MOON MAKES ITS OWN PLEA
collection of poems
WHAT HE TOOK
Elegy to my father.
TO GET HERE
Struggle to come to terms with a son's drug addiction.
GUENEVER SPEAKS
Cycle of persona poems about the woman at the center of the Arthurian legend.



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