Notes on A Real Man Would Have a Gun, Waite’s fifth poetry collection
A Real Man Would Have a Gun interrogates gender, sexuality, and parenthood through lyric poetry focusing on the speaker’s childhood growing up butch and intersex and their own journey of parenthood as both a mother/father figure. Waite puts a spotlight on current anti-trans laws and responds to them directly.
Most importantly, identity in this book feels fluid and simultaneous-the speaker refuses to be pinned down and celebrates their unique path through life.
Poems that moved me:
- “The Tie that Binds”
- “Boyfriend, 1992”
- “Bathroom Poem”
- “When Butches Shoot Pool”
Lines that lingered:
- “I feel the sting of who we might become, Joel / and I, two men in the woods, one of us / a warning, the other a woman, a fleeing fire.”
- “You sing to him, / the same song your mother sung to you. / You wonder what song a real man would sing / or if the kind of man / who guards the door / would sing at all.”
- “Sometimes one of them imagines their rage contained by the triangle, / watches…
Learn more about Queering Parenthood with Stacey Waite: A Book Review
