PRAISE FOR THE SECOND PERSON
‘If
drinking is bitter, change yourself to wine.’ Again and again, the
poems in The Second Person perform just such metamorphoses: from
faithlessness, they extract the faithful return of longing; from the stern
parameters of bodily affliction, they extract the consoling vista of mortal
comprehension. [Young] is no stranger, in other words, to the body in its
dying, the spirit in its starkest confrontations, the mind in its
intertwining missions of healing and analysis. All of this brings
incomparable richness to his poetic project: behold here the luminous form
that mindfulness assumes.
— LINDA GREGERSON
If you want poems that delve, if you
want language that dissects, if you want emotions that seize and ideas that
startle, then The Second Person has you written all over
it.
— J. D. MCCLATCHY
From Publishers Weekly STARRED REVIEW
The title of Young's second collection evokes the book's many concerns:
romantic partnership and sex (especially between two men), the nature of the
other, and the "you" to whom many of these poems are addressed. Young's
preoccupation with the body comes from his medical background (he is a
practicing physician) filtered through an aesthete's attention to form and
lyric (most of these poems are in neat tercets). Young's speakers are caught
between the desire to understand and the desire to simply desire: "It is not
the bone below the skin that I kiss/ but the silence clinging to the skull's
curve." The poems come to the page already burdened by a doctor's knowledge
that mortality rules over even love, and the natural world becomes an
analogy for human suffering: "the rain spreads like a bruise over the
ocean." The excellent long poem "Triptych at the Edge of Sight" sketches a
blurry romantic "landscape filled with failure" whose all-too-human
inhabitants may or may not find spiritual consolation. When Young's two
worldsthe medical and the metaphoricalmerge, they create a love poetry
that is sublime because and in spite of its knowledge. (Apr.)
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PRAISE FOR THE DAY UNDERNEATH THE DAY
Because he is a physician as
well as a poet, C. Dale Young straddles the realm of science and the world
of emotion. He confidently locates himself at the crucial intersection
between body and soul...
— Washington Post Book
World