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Dog Medicine

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Poems:

Dog Medicine
Picnic
Help Us to Pray for Craig
The Attic
Barbarians
Cancion De LaVenganza
Amen
Father Swarat
The Immediacy
Waiting Room
Enjoyment
Enemy Camp
The Lawyer, the Businessman, the Kid and You and I
Sweet Basil
Mother
Home
Pool Hall
Cold Metal Part
His Mother Locks Him in at Night
Those with Special Powers Die on Nights Like This
One Night

24 pages, Chapbook

First published January 1, 2007

5 people want to read

About the author

Matt Dennison

20 books3 followers
Matt Dennison was born in Crawfordsville, Indiana. After a rather extended and varied second childhood in New Orleans (psych tech, steamboat worker, street musician, legal secretary, house painter, and door-to-door poetry peddler), he completed his undergraduate degree at Mississippi State University, where he won the national Sigma Tau Delta critical essay competition (as judged by X.J. Kennedy). Dennison currently lives in Columbus, MS, where he continues to write and publish poetry and fiction in journals such as Cider Press Review, Natural Bridge, Main Street Rag, and Rattle.

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92 reviews83 followers
October 23, 2007
Dog Medicine is a high-class chapbook, 21 poems stapled snugly inside a heavy-weight cover, and an admonishment from the publisher that,

"This chapbook is limited edition fine art [...]. You are not buying paper and printer's ink by weight. You selected language art that took as long to create as paintings or other fine art. Pudding House caters to those who understand the value of the poet's good work. [...] Manuscripts are chosen on the basis of their contribution to literary arts and to the popular culture."

At $10 for 24 pages of content, one feels the ratio heavily. But in a curious way, the cost of the chapbook does lend the contents more value--I was determined to get my understanding's worth from each page, each poem (of course, this was a review copy, so the only thing GUD is paying for is shipping to the raffle winner--but it's the thought that counts).

At first blush, a good portion of the poems simply washed past me--generally filled with well-turned phrases and interesting scenarios or images, but not gripping me. But I read Dennison's Dog Medicine through several times, trying to see which poems would blossom with understanding, and which would remain, for me at least, unsolveable puzzles.

I found this approach rewarding--reading once through set them in my mind, and a second time I saw things I'd mis-seen or mis-thought... or simply missed, entirely. And a third time, I sat and struggled with pieces that wouldn't fold into sense or statement--and some of them, with this encouragement, did solidify. Of course, some still didn't--but given the strength of the poetry overall, I'd give the author the benefit of the doubt that the missed understanding might be on my end.

And now on to the selections, or at least those I felt I could say something about--

The titular piece, Dog Medicine, does well as a prologue and introduction to the rest of the book, but seems one of the weaker pieces on its own. There's too little context for what's there for any connection to be made. Perhaps I've not climbed enough hills, though--and I'm not a fan of dog slobber.

Picnic became more coherent for me with re-reading, but still never found its mark. I feel like I have all the answers until the last two lines, which put my understanding of everything up to that point in limbo. I get the base scenario, but I'm missing the meaning.

Help Us to Pray for Craig, on the other hand, gave me all I needed to understand--there are a few large questions that I wish I knew for sure, but their answers only change a note here or there in the piece's score. It's a complete story, with wind-up, misdirection, and, as James Bell would say, "Kapow".

The Attic, one of the longer poems at a full two pages, is also a full story. We get to feel the larger part of someone else's life, incredibly subtle for something touching on the Holocaust; made actually more personal through one-step removed POV, because it puts the "could have been me" one step away, makes you wonder for a moment what stories are right around the corner that you've never thought to ask for.

Barbarians is just a moment, a brief moment, and while understanding passes, at the end, between the two characters involved, I missed all but the setting.

Cancion De LaVenganza has a compelling rhythm, drives you swiftly to the end with its cadence and its damning lines--"and all my sins / you eat", which brings you back through to wonder at what just happened. Simply put, but beautifully executed--its simplicity belies the complexity of the statement.

Father Swarat is a swift build up towards a single thought, but doesn't seem to have the power of other works in the collection.

Read the rest of this review at http://www.gudmagazine.com/review/arc...
Displaying 1 of 1 review