My Great-Grandfather Danced Ballet

Book cover in black and white, a shirtless, fit man in dance tights standing on his toes.

Brick Books

Forthcoming,
Spring 2026

Two timelines intersect, weaving an alternate reality of queer ancestors, half-truths, domesticity, and desire in spite of past and present persecution

What if the queer ancestor you always wondered about had really existed—and could speak to you across all time? When there’s only one document to be found in the archive, can our misheard or half-remembered family stories be enough? My Great-Grandfather Danced Ballet is a daring, erotic, and humorous exploration of queer longing and Jewish possibility at the turn of two centuries. In a captivating series of narrative poems, Misha Solomon entwines an alternate memoir of his great-grandfather in pre-Holocaust Romania with a contemporary gay life in Montreal. With profound vision, voice, and craft, Solomon sets a new and powerful precedent for speculative poetic histories, allowing intimacy to find a way through memories real, imagined, and desired.

MY GREAT-GRANDFATHER DANCED BALLET

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MY GREAT-GRANDFATHER DANCED BALLET 〰️

Advance Praise
for

"The conversational meets the confessional in Misha Solomon's My Great-Grandfather Danced Ballet, a formally daring, stunningly tender, and frequently hilarious exploration of queerness, Jewishness, domestic intimacy, and ancestral lineage. Moving in time and place from present-day Montreal to New York to the eponymous ballet dancer's native Romania in the early 20th century, this genre-bending, polyphonic collection interweaves stories and lives with verve and virtuosity. These are poems of queer joy as much as they are of longing and desire, poems that interrogate personal subjectivity and the narratives we inherit. A truly astonishing and unforgettable debut."

- Lisa Richter

"The poems of Misha Solomon's My Great-Grandfather Danced Ballet transcend the boundaries of and lacunae within a familial lineage to present us with a relentlessly inventive and endearing experience of queer connection. We are introduced to Ernest, a figure based on Solomon's own grandfather who danced ballet in pre-Holocaust Romania, as he navigates his family's emigration to Montreal while writing letters to his former lover, Rubin. Their epistolary exchange is both tender and electric, quotidian and erotic, and demonstrates Solomon's exceptional poetic range. Complementary poems also explore the author's 'queer mundanity' and desire to recover from the gaps of Jewish diasporic experience and intergenerational bond. This work is an introduction to a powerful new voice in Canadian poetry."

- Liz Howard

FLORALS

FLORALS

above/ground press
(2020)

“Solomon’s chapbook was even his publishing debut, and the poems are lyrically and devastatingly beautiful, open and stunning. There is such an open-heartedness to these poems”

- rob mclennan

Full Sentences

Full Sentences

In his newest chapbook, Montreal poet Misha Solomon brings his keen eye and sharp sense of humour to this stellar collection of prose poems. Finding absurdity in the familiar and the everyday, these finely empathetic poems wrestle with the past and how it echoes in the present. At times beautiful and wistful, at times shocking and hilarious, but always presented through the lens of Solomon’s keen wit.

- James Hawes

Turret House Press
(2022)

“These are poems engaged in memoir, autobiography, and imagined selves that expand more than they reduce, potentiate more than they mitigate, queering the self through constant engagement with identity in a multitude of dizzying centripetal perspectives.”

- Jay Miller, for Bibelotages