Pink Lady

Poems

Only Denise Duhamel could have written these poems. Pink Lady takes a common but often overlooked subject—the decline of an elderly parent—and finds in it all the meat of the human heart. Duhamel shares not just the painful moments but the intimate, the illuminating, and the joyful. And all along we have the humor of the speaker and her resilient mother who complains of the ‘wackadoodle’ in the White House and the COVID-induced absurdity that forces her nurses to suit up like astronauts. Forget Gideon’s Bible; it’s Pink Lady that should be in every hospital nightstand.
Beth Ann Fennelly, author of Heating & Cooling: 52 Micro-Memoirs

When her mother agrees to enter a Rhode Island nursing home in December of 2019, Denise Duhamel promises she’ll visit at least once a month. By March of 2020, everyone is in lockdown. The elegies in Pink Lady explore the resiliency of her elderly mother and nurses on the frontline, as well as the personal and universally experienced anxieties faced during pandemic policies. With focus, obsession, and even humor, Duhamel chronicles the separation of a mother and daughter, documenting the power of imagination, the aging body, and the limits of caregiving.

88 Pages, 6 x 9 in.

January, 2025

isbn : 9780822967361

Subjects

about the author

Denise Duhamel

Denise Duhamel is a distinguished university professor in the MFA program at Florida International University in Miami. Her previous books include Second Story, Scald, Blowout, Ka-Ching!, Two and Two, and Queen for a Day: Selected and New Poems. She is a recipient of fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts.

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Denise Duhamel