Summary

This is a sequence of six poems that form the centerpiece of Doty's book of the same name. The scene is the coast (Provincetown) where the author's companion, Wally, is dying of AIDS: "sometimes / when I put my head to his chest / I can hear the virus humming . . . . " The poet dreams of a dog they don't have. He dreams of saving Wally. Wally tells him of a dream of light and beckoning.

Michael dreams of "helping Randy out of bed" and, suddenly, Randy steps out of his body. Among these coastal dreams of caring and dying, Atlantis emerges "from the waters again: our continent, where it always was / . . . unforgettable, / drenched, unchanged." In the end (and before Wally's end), they do get a new dog who "licks Wally's face" and "bathes every / irreplaceable inch / of his head."

Commentary

A finely-wrought and touching sequence of poems about the spiritual and psychological experience of caring for a dying loved one.

Miscellaneous

The book, Atlantis, received the Ambassador Book Award, the Bingham Poetry Prize, and the Lambda Literary Award.

Publisher

Harper Perennial

Place Published

New York

Edition

1995

Page Count

103