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In 1987 poet and physician Jon Mukand published Sutured Words, a volume of contemporary poems to help patients, their families and friends, and all health care professionals embrace the complexity of healing, illness, and death. Robert Coles called the collection 鈥渁 wonderful source of inspiration and instruction for any of us who are trying to figure out what our work means鈥; Norman Cousins was impressed by the 鈥渄iscernment and high quality of the selections.鈥 Now, in Articulations, Mukand adds more than a hundred new poems to the strongest poems from Sutured Words to give us a lyrical, enlightened understanding of the human dimensions of suffering and illness.
鈥淭his gem of a thematic anthology achieves the seemingly impossible鈥攖wice. First, in more than 400 pages, it contains not a single clinker. Second, it returns poetry to the people, for one or another of these poems about sickness, hospitals, and suffering affords inspiration, comfort, knowledge, or emotional impact for virtually everyone.鈥濃Booklist
鈥淸This anthology] asserts that the body's emergencies inspire poetry; so urgent are their subjects, some of the poems seem almost to have been written in blood, without a moment's pause to ponder their implications鈥 [Mukand's work] admirably attempts to bring together some of the most important poetry on illness, work that lays bare the awful, exquisite, and jutting bones of the body disrupted.鈥濃Parnassus
鈥溾atients and their families may learn that they are not alone in their trials: others have traveled the difficult ground, measured it, and passed along their discoveries. Thus, any one who is mortal can profit from reading this book.鈥濃Literature and Medicine
鈥淚 have lived with this volume for two months and might spend another two years extracting wisdom and pleasure from these poems. They are not esoteric, yet they are profound and full of condensed insight. The poems explore and illuminate the varieties of medical experience for patients, friends, and family members, and health care professionals.鈥濃擯aul A. Fiore in the Journal of the American Medical Association
鈥淓very physician will recognize here the challenges, joys, and sorrows that make medicine such a difficult and rewarding profession.鈥濃Journal of Family Practice