The Woman You Write Poems About
Most of the time when I read poetry books, I’ll dog-ear the pages of poems I really like. I started to do this with Danielle (Dani) Montgomery’s collection, The Woman You Write Poems About, but within the first twenty pages I realized I didn’t have one non-bent-down page corner; every single poem in this collection is intriguing and amazing in its own way. What makes Montgomery’s poetry outstanding is that she brings out the brutal truth of really hard subjects. Furthermore, the language she uses to do this is breathtaking in the way that a life realization seriously makes you stop for a second, until you realize you aren’t breathing because you’ve been thinking these big thoughts instead. Montgomery’s poetry brings up these big thoughts and makes you stop for a moment (or more).
The truths that Montgomery bring to the page involve the harsh realities of being a poor, single mother attempting to navigate the different types of violence in our society, and trying to keep her sanity while doing it. In the poem “S.S.A.” Montgomery reveals:
on the phone after my (relatively) pleasant conversation with mr. social security, I’m feeling like the woman you write poems about not the woman who writes poems I’m feeling like that like a little tragic with my two screaming kids stained shirt messed up hair mr. social security wants to know why can’t you work are you worthy and I give my best brightest explanation but this is a poem from the woman you write poems about listen I can write my own maybe I already have I’m a bad ass on the phone filling out forms all day listen this is a poem from the woman you write poems about
She is the woman with the screaming kids. She is the woman who has no money and is trying to make ends meet with each roll of pennies. She is the woman who has been turned into a tool for artists seeking out an empathetic subject, but here she is becoming the artist. She is describing her own situation, and talking back to what has already been talked about her.
As a single mother and a poet, the two stereotypes of the poor single mother and the starving artist collide in Montgomery’s work. She discusses the hardship of being depressed and being a mother (“poem for mamas with postpartum depression: we can make it through”), as well as the moments in her life that have sparked joy and creativity (“what the living do”):
at nineteen I woke up in my apartment to the sound of a man pissing out back behind the dumpster and I shook off sleep to listen I loved the sound of him pissing in congratulations yes congratulations we lived through another night
Sarcastic, raw, refreshing, humorous, and relieving in all of her honesty, Montgomery exposes her readers to what it means to face life’s tough shit, look at it, do what you can with it, laugh, cry, and then continue to survive.
This is an awesome review! The author is a dear friend of mine. But she's not a single mother (not sure where you got that idea?) She's been with her partner for close to 15 years, in fact. Thanks for reviewing this book. I hope word spreads about her works because this collection is really moving and intense and beautiful. I'm not even a big poetry fan and this book totally bowled me over.