Skip to main content

Distributed for Omnidawn Publishing, Inc.

The Patient Is an Unreliable Historian

A poetry collection that questions the current construction of psychiatric treatment while speaking through lived experience and advocating for disability justice.
 
The poems of Brody Parrish Craig’s new collection upends narratives around current psychiatric treatment models to focus on the lived experience of survivors and to speak toward liberation, abolition, and disability justice. Titled after the author’s own medical records, The Patient Is an Unreliable Historian questions the prevailing narrative that the medical industry knows stories of disability and madness better than those who have lived them.
 
Craig uses lyricism to expose the intersection of madness and criminality in contemporary American culture, moving through institutions, community spaces, and loss of kin. Through the course of the collection, the speaker turns toward irreverence and interrogation, carves out their own freedom, and challenges the script of the patient, the mad, and the “criminal.” These poems deconstruct the “patient” to set the person free.
 

100 pages | 6 x 9 | © 2024

Poetry


Omnidawn Publishing, Inc. image

View all books from Omnidawn Publishing, Inc.

Reviews

The Patient Is an Unreliable Historian begins off script, where the patient diagnoses the failures of medicine. From the clinic to the prison cell, this book speaks through those abandoned or abused by systems of care. Craig’s words alight with a madness that has both the fervid imagination of a raveling mind and lucid anger forged in struggle. With a poet’s lyricism and a critic’s cutting insight, Craig carves queer possibilities into the open road between Oklahoma, Texas, and Arkansas. Here, freedom is a covenant we make with one another—a promise ‘to keep / us each alive.’”

V. Jo Hsu, author of "Constellating Home: Trans and Queer Asian American Rhetorics"

"The Patient is an Unreliable Historian subverts everything we think about madness and what it means to be a patient. A beautiful, haunting, and tender lyrical memoir."

Alice Wong, author of "Year of the Tiger"

"A scheduled ghost—an ecstatic poet for this strange era, Craig’s The Patient is an Unreliable Historian is a collection of devotions. The poet writes, 'I am limited / to the memorial / of language,' and these poems go ahead and build their own shrines anyway. Another poet of the ecstatic, Allen Ginsberg wrote, 'I saw the best minds of my generation destroyed by madness, starving hysterical naked.' Now, it’s Parrish Craig who catalogues the destruction by state-sanctioned violence. In each poem, a prayer—not to any gods but us. Not to any gods but transsexuals, addicts, the disabled, queers, beloveds, lilacs, and tenderness. This book is not a memorial, it is a march."

Canese Jarboe, author of "SISSY"

"Craig’s The Patient is an Unreliable Historian contains a lyric both dazzling in its calm and tender in its storm. The speaker in Craig’s poems knows the body as an intimate archive of potential: '& maybe I’m going / under the knife / to sing with other angels.' This is an exercise in autonomy, in liberation for the love of personhood. The joy in this collection if free from economy and is lives in the commons: 'say pennies lie / peonies grow.'"

C.T. Salazar, author of "Headless John the Baptist Hitchhiking"

"Craig is a singular, urgent voice born of the South. But Craig grew up in a different battlefield, an unbuckled Bible Belt, where Americans 'made the missing into headlines' and 'played the prison like a savior.' This is an America where the body becomes a 'criminal,' the hospital isn’t a 'safe space,' 'cis- subtitle / our language,' and barriers 'keep disabled / out.' Craig’s poetry has a distinct vision that trespasses borders and punctuations, breathes revolution and evolution. The Patient Is an Unreliable Historian is a collection of psalms, 'the split husk sacrament' where if you 'hold / the notes so long / the sound unblocks / each door you know // your future possible / as a newly unbarred window.' Craig writes, 'I’ll punch the door they shut us in / until the copper melts.' These poems are our guidebook to that other America."

Kaveh Bassiri, author of "99 Names of Exile" and "Elementary English"

Be the first to know

Get the latest updates on new releases, special offers, and media highlights when you subscribe to our email lists!

Sign up here for updates about the Press