When Jillian Weise wrote The Amputee's Guide to Sex, it was with the intention of changing the conversation around disability; essentially, she was tired of seeing ``cripples`` portrayed as asexual characters.
The collection that resulted is a powerful lesson in desire, the body, pain, and possession.
These poems interrogate medical language and history, imagine Mona Lisa in a wheelchair, rewrite Elizabeth Bishop's poem ``In the Waiting Room,`` address a lover's arsonist ex-girlfriend, and show the prosthesis as the object of male curiosity and lust.
Publishers Weekly, in a starred review, called the book a ``charged and daring debut`` and described Jillian Weise as an ``agile and powerful poet .
speaking boldly and compassionately about a little-discussed subject that becomes universal in her careful hands.
`` Ten years since its first publication, our culture continues to grapple with questions limned in this collection.
In a new introduction, Weise revisits and recontextualizes her work, revealing its urgency to our present moment.
What are the challenges of speaking ``for`` a community? How to resist the institutionalization of ableist paradigms? How are atypical bodies silenced? Where do our corporeal selves intersect with our technologies?.