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Book ReviewBody
of Diminishing Motion: Poems and a Memoir Joan
Seliger Sidney’s marvelous book, Body of Diminishing Motion,
has not only turned illness, specifically multiple sclerosis, into a
proper subject for poetry. It has transformed disease in general into
something much larger than itself, something that embodies the
quintessence of poetry and the fundamental struggle for balance
between inspiration and control that all writers face. With her spare, precise, yet lovely lines, pared to the essential, Sidney’s poems are elegance fulfilled in simplicity. Several leitmotifs interest her elucidating the larger theme: Secrecy surrounds Sidney’s disease; she insists her parents never learn the truth -- ”[H]ow can I tell you // why I drag my feet to walk?...// with every step...I know/ I disappoint you” is from “Preserves,” the first poem in the book; but multiple sclerosis is fundamentally, cellularly, a loss of muscle control as a result of degradation of myelin surrounding the nerve, which leads to very public consequences. The Holocaust deaths of grandparents and other relatives is surely the supreme loss, but recounting the history of those who survived empowers -- in the how’s and why’s of that retelling at least. Other
foci recur throughout the book, important to Sidney: friendship in the
midst of struggle; kindnesses, big and small and the difference they
make; the importance of and the ambivalence towards family and family
history, wanting to forget, to live ‘a normal life’ and wanting to
keep that history alive: “Why do you say you escaped, / Mother
when you are still / trapped among their bones?” (“Leaving”);
the struggle of Sidney to heal herself, to find The Cure, versus the
recognition that she is relentlessly losing strength no matter what
she does. And she does curse her illness, she hates it and what it has done to her, does not relish the patient role; she doesn’t pretend it has added more to her life than it has taken away; she would give it back in a second. But she is working on acceptance and has wrought a lovely book of poems in its wake, poetry that wakes in us an understanding both of MS and of how it feels to have to deal with any chronic degenerative disease. This is a book that most definitely was needed in the world and Sidney has done an admirable job in giving it to us. Published: July 7, 2005 |
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