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Graft Fixation begins with an accident report, then an admonition: “(There is always another version of this story.)” Tadros skillfully grafts verse, erasures, found language, institutional documents and darkly mysterious cross-sections of flesh and bone as she viscerally hones a unique genre: feminist injury poetics. Like the beautiful photographic abstractions of her injuries, Tadros dissects with MRI precision layers of eroticism, consent, gender, self-destruction and forgiveness to the very marrow of language, where she confronts the secret roots of pain and longing. Tadros emerges a cyborgian narrator for a twenty-first century literature on the enigmatic nature of injury.

— Kathline Carr, author of Miraculum Monstrum

In Graft Fixation, Billie R. Tadros mines the weary syntaxes of bureaucracy for parallel purposes: to construct a new language, and to reconstruct a body. “I’m still/hyperventilating trying to//return to my body”: through erasures, samplings, and memories, Tadros suggests that when our bodies are injured, the private is made public. We are studied, watched, consoled, and cajoled. Graft Fixation offers a unique route back home to ourselves.

— Nick Ripatrazone, author of Longing for an Absent God

To serve as witness to your own broken body. To press your wounds to paper to see if the tissue will take. Through debriding the sources of injury—accident reports, MRI images, and status updates—Tadros reconstructs the injury narrative into a moving body of work. Graft Fixation both breaks and brakes me.

— Christine Friedlander, author of Avant Gauze

Billie R. Tadros’s Graft Fixation is fascinated by what comes together after a break—it’s never quite the old form, but it’s not fully a new one, either. The poems work around a car crash and subsequent injury in scattered, piecemeal forms, mirroring the way trauma isn’t digested all at once or in a simple, understandable manner. The speaker knows they will never be who they used to be, but they seek a new agency, a fresh way to conceive of their identity in relation to and transcending the body. These poems are frantic and jagged, but they move towards an evolution.

— Ruth Baumann, author of Thornwork

Graft Fixation takes apart the legal and medical language surrounding injury in a car crash, turns those words over and over, and reassembles this multi-layered language with a mixture of angry grief and intense playfulness. The resulting poems interrogate our understanding of bodies, especially women’s bodies, through collisions of language and form: human/auto body, sexual/moving violation, good/bad pain. No description of this book could prepare you. Read it, and let it take you apart.

— Katie Manning, author of Tasty Other

Graft Fixation is intense and powerful, truly a “cyborg” of medical and emotional language. You can feel the weight of the physical injury, the cold finality of the medical documents, the crushing blow of losing something you love. There are two stories here: the first is the cold, definitive medical truth; and the other is the raw, heart-breaking, uncertain truth of what life turns into now.

— Rachael Steil, author of Running in Silence: My Drive for Perfection and the Eating Disorder That Fed It