Dog years A memoir

Mark Doty

Large print - 2007

Why do dogs speak so profoundly to our inner lives? When poet Doty decides to adopt a dog as a companion for his dying partner, he finds himself bringing home Beau, a large golden retriever, malnourished and in need of loving care. Beau joins Arden, the black retriever, to complete their family. Their tenacity, loyalty, and love inspire him when all else fails. This is a moving and intimate memoir interwoven with profound reflections on our feelings for animals and the lessons they teach us about life, love, and loss.--From publisher description.

Saved in:

1st floor Show me where

LARGE PRINT/BIOGRAPHY/Doty, Mark
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
1st floor LARGE PRINT/BIOGRAPHY/Doty, Mark Checked In
Subjects
Published
New York : HarperLuxe c2007.
Language
English
Main Author
Mark Doty (-)
Edition
1st HarperLuxe ed., larger print ed
Item Description
HarperLuxe larger print, 14 point font.
Physical Description
xii, 267 p. (large print) ; 23 cm
ISBN
9780061233197
  • Entr'acte: On sentimentality
  • Entr'acte: On being a fool
  • Entr'acte: The photographed dog
  • Entr'acte: Smell of rain in the field
  • Entr'acte: Dogs and their names
  • Entr'acte: Graveside
  • Entr'acte: Ethical fable
  • Entr'acte: Ordinary happiness
  • Entr'acte: Old photo
  • Entr'acte: Zero point
  • Entr'acte: Questions about time
  • Entr'acte: Serotonin
  • Entr'acte: A show
  • Entr'acte: Drugs for Arden
  • Entr'acte: Second wind
  • Envoi: Toy wolf.
Review by New York Times Review

MENTION the term "doggie lit" to most winners of England's T. S. Eliot Prize for poetry and they'll probably think you're referring to a graduate course on classical representations of Cerberus - or maybe to something Hollywood starlets give their Chihuahuas to browse while getting doggie pedicures. But Mark Doty, the only American to have won the prize (for his 1993 collection "My Alexandria"), is that rare thing: a serious poet with what seems to be a keen eye for trends. At a time when John Grogan's "Marley & Me" has revealed a public appetite for the gushing reveries of a dog owner, and Joan Didion's "Year of Magical Thinking" proved that readers can handle articulate narratives of grief, Doty has delivered a memoir that is both at once. Doty has long been an elegist. He is perhaps best known as the author of the stirring memoir "Heaven's Coast" (1996), which told of life lived in the grip of the AIDS epidemic and the eventual death of his partner, Wally, from the disease; and another memoir, "Firebird" (1999), about growing up gay and artistic in an itinerant, troubled Southern family. He has documented the personal and cultural toll of AIDS in several books of poems as well, particularly "My Alexandria" and "Atlantis," large parts of which are elegies to Wally. Doty's dogs, Beau and Arden, have made many appearances in his work, so it's not surprising that their deaths would inspire another memoir. "I am not, resolutely, used to it," Doty writes. "Too easy an acceptance seems, frankly, sentimental, an erasure of the particular irreplaceable stuff of individuality with a vague, generalized truth." And so begins his resurrection of that particular stuff: not only of Beau's "beautiful rump" or the corn-muffin smell of Arden's ears, but of his own will to live without them. "My two speechless friends," he writes. "They were the secret heroes of my own vitality." Doty's elegiac tendency is aided by his dazzling, tactile grasp of the world. He's often wonderful when illuminating some visual detail - like an old house in Provincetown that has been souped up with "chocolatey-plum varnish" so "the whole thing gleams like a vaguely dangerous piece of pastry." His descriptions of Beau and Arden frolicking around the Cape, Greenwich Village or the various locations of Doty's teaching appointments can be both arresting and touching. About Beau he writes: "When he swims in the Great Salt Lake, water so thick with salinity it's weirdly buoying, he rides up high on the small waves, his mouth closed, his dignified head sailing above the surface." Sometimes, though, this rapture turns into a swoon. Being given a tomato-juice bath after being sprayed by a skunk, "Arden is positively symphonic with scent, like that fantasy creation of the decadent symbolist des Esseintes, in Huysman's 19th-century novel, the perfume organ." This book aspires to the seriousness of books like Elizabeth Marshall Thomas's splendid "Hidden Life of Dogs," which sought to uncover canine thought processes and emotions. "Dog Years" is packed with reverent meditations on a dog's capacity for nobility, sensitivity and grief; academic postulations on how dogs wake us from the "enabling exile of symbol-making" back to our primitive selves; and discussions of dog food, dog acupuncture and dog kennels, all of which receive the kind of anxious care parenting magazines reserve for the cognitive evaluation of infants. But Doty's scholarly meanderings do little to disguise the fact that he is going over old ground here, sometimes to a startling degree. There is a passage where Doty first brings Beau home to Wally that is a nearly verbatim re-enactment of the end of "Atlantis." Two-thirds of the way through "Dog Years," Doty experiences what he calls "the worst moment of my life" when, suddenly overwhelmed by the many griefs he's survived, he has a suicidal urge to jump off the Staten Island Ferry and take Beau (who is sick with a serious neurological disorder) along with him. Soon Beau and Arden will both pass away. The remaining pages offer up meditations on death and despair via the Kabbala, Emily Dickinson, Judy Garland, the "suffering Christ" and a dream Doty had at 16 or 17 in which he was overtaken by a skeletal ferryman in a rowboat. "When I looked into the dark sockets of those eyes, I was suddenly utterly and completely terrified," Doty writes, without the slightest smirk at his 16-year-old gravitas. "There was nothing there, behind that blank, but the great open emptiness of the world." It's no surprise, really, that a poet's memoir about his dogs would turn into a book about mortality. Nor is it surprising that events that seem quite ordinary from the outside would be felt with this degree of intensity by a poet. But with its breathless aestheticizing of dog life, its melodrama and its rehashing of old material, "Dog Years" often comes dangerously close to parodying Doty's best work. While one never doubts the authenticity of Doty's love for his dogs, one does doubt the wisdom of attempting to turn all of this into the stuff of high tragedy. Danielle Chapman is an editor at Poetry magazine.

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [October 27, 2009]

Dog Years LP Chapter One No dog has ever said a word, but that doesn't mean they live outside the world of speech. They listen acutely. They wait to hear a term-- biscuit, walk --and an inflection they know. What a stream of incomprehensible signs passes over them as they wait, patiently, for one of a few familiar words! Because they do not speak, except in the most limited fashion, we are always trying to figure them out. The expression is telling: to "figure out" is to make figures of speech, to invent metaphors to help us understand the world. To choose to live with a dog is to agree to participate in a long process of interpretation--a mutual agreement, though the human being holds most of the cards. What the interpreter must do is tell stories--sometimes to the dog in question. Who hasn't heard a dog walker chattering away to her pet, as if she were serving as a kind of linguistic mirror: "You are scared of that police horse," "Lola loves that ball!" Some people speak for their dogs in the first person, as though the dog were ventriloquizing his owner. There's inevitably something embarrassing about this; a kind of silly intimacy that might seem sweet at home becomes a source of eye-rolling discomfort to strangers. But most stories about dogs are narrated to other people, as we go on articulating the tales of our animals' lives, in order to bring their otherwise incomprehensible experience into the more orderly world of speech. Taking pictures of your pet serves much the same function; it isn't just about memory and the desire to record, but a way to bring something of the inchoate into the world of the represented. This is a part of the pet owner's work. In order to live within the domestic world, the dog must be named, read, and in some way understood. Of course, listening to stories about other people's pets is perilous, like listening to the recitation of dreams. Such reports may be full of charm for the dreamer, but for the poor listener they're usually fatally dull. The dreamer has no distance from the spell of the dream, and cannot say just how it mattered so, and language mostly fails to capture the deeply interior character of dreams anyway. We listen with an appreciation for the speaker's intent, but without much interest in the actual story. Love itself is a bit like that: you can describe your beloved until the tongue tires and still, in truth, fail to get at the particular quality that has captured you. We give up, finally, and distill such feelings into single images: the bronzy warmth of one of his glances, or that way of turning the head she has when she's thinking and momentarily stops being aware of other people. That, we tell ourselves, stands for what we love. But it's perfectly clear that such images explain nothing. They serve as signposts for some incommunicable thing. Being in love is our most common version of the unsayable; everyone seems to recognize that you can't experience it from the outside, not quite--you have to feel it from the inside in order to know what it is. Maybe the experience of loving an animal is actually more resistant to language, since animals cannot speak back to us, cannot characterize themselves or correct our assumptions about them. They look at us across a void made of the distance between their lives and our immersion in language. "Not a single one of his myriad sensations," wrote Virginia Woolf of Elizabeth Barrett Browning's cocker spaniel, Flush, "ever submitted itself to the deformity of words." Maybe they remind us, in this way, of our own origins, when our bodies were not yet assumed into the world of speech. Then we could experience wordlessly, which must at once be a painful thing and a strange joy, a pure kind of engagement that adults never know again. Can it even be called "painful" or a "joy," if the infant who is feeling those things has no terms for them, only the uninterpreted life of emotion and sensation? We suffer a loss, leaving the physical world for the world of words--even though we gain our personhood in the process. Love for a wordless creature, once it takes hold, is an enchantment, and the enchanted speak, famously, in private mutterings, cryptic riddles, or gibberish. This is why I shouldn't be writing anything to do with the two dogs who have been such presences for sixteen years of my life. How on earth could I stand at the requisite distance to say anything that might matter? Last month five thousand people died here in New York; the ruins of the towers in which--with which--they fell smolder still. [I wrote these words in October of 2001; the dead had not yet been properly counted; it was impossible to find the bodies, and the lists of the missing were unclear.] When the wind is right, Chelsea fills with the smell of burning plastic, as if somewhere down in the rubble thousands and thousands of computers were slowly, poisonously burning, along with fluorescent tubes and industrial carpeting and the atomized pieces of corporate art that lined the reception room walls. My friends in other cities speak about the new war, the roots of this atrocity and its relationship to other atrocities around the globe; they worry over the notion of "evil," whether it's a reality or a concept with no use in the public sphere. I understand that such things matter, but for me they're nothing but air. I can't stop seeing the whitened boots of the rescue workers trudging back uptown, or sitting beside me on the subway benches. Their battered leather and shoelaces, cuffs and ankles are covered with a thick powder composed of atomized concrete: the pulverized stuff of two hundred floors of offices--desk chairs, files, coffee cups--commingled with the stuff of human bodies reduced to creamy ash. The rubble trucks rumble up Eighth Avenue, uncovered. The white grit blows out in troubled eddies, and snow gusts and coats our faces and hair. Somewhere in that dust are the atoms of Graham, a man I knew a little, and saw last at the end of summer, when he was laughing on the street, his tattooed arms flashing in the sun. Dog Years LP . Copyright © by Mark Doty. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. Available now wherever books are sold. Excerpted from Dog Years: A Memoir by Mark Doty All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.