In Slouching Towards Guantanamo, Jim Ferris continues to challenge the way we have all learned
to think about disability and people with disabilities. These splendid
poems navigate between the light touch of tender irony and the arresting
perspective disabled bodies can offer our common understandings.
--Rosemarie Garland-Thomson, Staring: How
We Look
"Poems with Disabilities," the opening poem
of Jim Ferris' Slouching Towards Guantanamo is a funny, sly, quietly mocking, often touching take on the
disability theme that saturates this collection. This poem, like so many
others in this heartfelt and expressive compilation, exhorts us, beguiles
us, charms us; and suddenly, as we're reading along--just as he promises--
our "angle of vision jumps" and our "entrails aren't where
we left them." A precise and eloquent unraveling of life's knottier
complexities.
--Terry Galloway, Mean Little deaf Queer
Slouching Towards Guantanamo
is kind of holy, more than a little Whitmanesque when Jim Ferris writes,
"This is my body. Look if you like." And so we do in these funny,
lacerating poems, veering from pain to pain. They sing the body derelict,
the body "merely" different. Intensely physical, surprisingly
musical, capacious and elegiac at once, Slouching
Towards Guantanamo is thrilling work, though
things fall apart, as do we all.
--Paul Guest, My Index of Slightly Horrifying
Knowledge