Tuesday, November 29, 2011
Monday, November 14, 2011
Tuesday, November 01, 2011
Wednesday, October 26, 2011
Chaudiere Books author Nicholas Lea reads on November 4 in Ottawa
Chaudiere Books author Nicholas Lea gives a rare reading as part of the fall 2011 edition of the ottawa small press book fair pre-reading, launching a new chapbook with The Emergency Response Unit. He reads with Leo Brent Robillard and Lillian Necakov at The Carleton Tavern, 223 Armstrong (at Parkdale), Ottawa on Friday, November 4, 2011. Doors at 7pm, reading at 7:30. For more information, check here.
Tuesday, October 25, 2011
Thursday, October 20, 2011
Ottawa X-Press: best of Ottawa 2011: Marcus McCann's Soft Where (?)
It's good to see one of our books (again) in Ottawa X-Press' "Best of Ottawa" readers poll, his Soft Where listed in the "Best Work of Fiction/Non-fiction/Poetry by Local Writer" category, despite the fact that the book came out in 2009, and the fact that he's lived in Toronto for at least a year. Um, hooray! It must mean good things about how he and his work are seen in Ottawa, yes? Here's the entire list:
Best Work of Fiction/Non-fiction/Poetry by Local Writer
Alone in the Classroom, by Elizabeth Hay
Girl Unwrapped, by Gabriella Goliger
An Open Door in the Landscape, by Elisabeth Harvor
End of Days, by Max Turner
The Horse That Leaps Through Clouds, by Eric Enno Tamm
Soft Where, by Marcus McCann
Other
Monday, October 10, 2011
interview with Marcus McCann at MyGSA.ca
Marcus McCann is a poet and journalist. He grew up in working-class Hamilton. From 2006-2011, he worked in various capacities at Xtra, eventually becoming the managing editor of both the Toronto and Ottawa editions. He recently left Xtra to begin law school. He's the author of one book of poems, Soft Where, and eight chapbooks. He was shortlisted for the Gerald Lampert and Robert Kroetsch awards, and in 2009, he won the John Newlove Award. His second full-length book will be released in the spring of 2012.
Interview with Marcus McCann (read original post with links here)
What inspired you to become a writer? At what age did you begin and what was your first published piece?
When I was a teenager, the Hamilton school board tolerated a little program run out of the back of the trunk of one of the English teachers, Meg Young. It was called the Student Literary Association; basically, it was a group of wayward, socially awkward teens who met twice a month in the basement of the Board of Ed building downtown. It was great. I met older teens who were also writers — Aidan Johnson, Marissa Achong, Julie with the monster Doc Martins, a guy named Nick who introduced us to the music of David Byrne… it was very important for me to have a network of young writers I could talk with. Anyway, I’m pretty sure my first published poetry was in the SLA’s annual anthology, circa 1997.
Partially thanks to the SLA, poetry became an obsession in my later teen years — when I was 17 or so, I gave up reading novels, because I thought that they couldn’t be art. Poetry, that was the one true art form. *Cough* My views have softened since then.
Could you tell us a bit about your writing process? Do you have a favourite place where you write? Do you need certain books/snacks/hats/animals/etc. with you? Do you prefer well-lit rooms with lots of windows, or darkness with ridiculous amounts of candles and incense? Are you a creature of routine (up at 6a.m., writing until noon when you break for a light lunch of arugula salad with a warm honey-dijon vinaigrette) or do you thrive on spontaneity and spend your writing time on the move from one greasy spoon to the next?
Before I get too caught up in my day – checking my Facebook and email, reading the news, what have you – I try to set aside at least two hours for reading and writing poetry, usually with my morning coffee. In my practice, I consider reading — reading deeply, trying to understand the mechanics of a poem, especially contemporary poetry — to be the same as writing. I try to save rewrites and fiddling with poems for after that.
What books are you reading right now and which authors do you love? What book have you read as an adult that you wish you had read when you were young?
Poetry books I’m reading right now: Robert Earl Stewart’s Campfire Radio Rhapsody and Craig Poile’s True Concessions.
Great books by contemporary Canadian poets, which I wish had been written when I was younger: Ken Babstock’s Airstream Land Yacht and Margaret Christakos’ Sooner. They’re both master classes in what a poem can be. Intimidating stuff. Oh, and Sina Queyras’ Expressway, which for me, is one of the few book-long poem projects that has resonated with me. Those three books are essential reading from the last 10 years.
And if you’re a gay guy writing about gay male experience, read Mark Doty. He’s the finest poet of the gay male experience writing today, probably. Or maybe Carl Philips is.
Do you find that being both a poet and a journalist is a complex experience? Do you feel the world exists dramatically differently through the lens of a poet vs. a journalist?
No more so, probably, than being a poet and a student, or a poet and an academic, or whatever. Poets have day jobs. That’s the reality. The essential question is one of, “when will I find the time?”
You published a large number of chapbooks before coming out with your first full-length poetry collection, Soft Where. Can you tell us a bit about your experience working with smaller independent presses and why you decided to focus on writing chapbooks?
How did it start? I went to dozens — literally dozens — of readings in Ottawa, some given by established poets, some given by emerging poets. I didn’t go to hock my own work; I went because I was interested in what poetry was being produced. Some of the readings I liked, some I didn’t. But I almost never, ever regretted going to readings.
I submitted poems to magazines — and got lots of rejections. At first, my acceptance rate was about 3 percent, meaning that for every 30 poems I sent out to magazines, one was accepted. It gradually improved. I took writing workshops — an early one with rob mclennan was especially helpful — and volunteered with a couple of local literary magazines, Bywords and the now defunct Yawp.
Out of that atmosphere of cross-pollination, my first chapbooks came to be. Heteroskpetical, with mclennan’s above/ground in 2007. Petty Illness Leaflet and the collaborative Basement Tapes with my own short-lived imprint, The Onion Union. The Tech/tonic Suite with Alberta’s Rubicon Press, which was the result of winning their annual chapbook contest. And Force Quit, from Toronto’s The Emergency Response Unit, thanks to connections I’d made in the small press world with Andrew Faulkner and, later, Leigh Nash.
Both magazine publishing and chapbook publishing were ways of testing myself and my poems. If anyone bought all of my chapbooks up until that point, then Soft Where, my first full length collection, would have had very little new to offer them. Some pieces had been published at least twice by then, first in magazines, then in chapbooks, before they were published in Soft Where. I’ve had a couple of very lucky breaks in my writing life, but micropresses, chapbooks and literary magazines were — are — essential to my development as a poet.
Between Soft Where and my second book, The Hard Return (which is coming out next spring with Insomniac) I did two additional chapbooks, Town in a long day of leaving (above/ground) and The Glass Jaw (Bywords), which, among other things, shows that chapbooks aren’t just a stepping stone to full-length book publishing, but are an end in themselves.
As a writer, do you feel that being openly queer has had any direct or indirect impact on your writing career and your success?
Let me start by saying this: if you’re a young queer writer, you have a long and proud history of queer poetry to draw on. It is a rich font of material, as deep and broad a poetic folio as any in the history of humankind. And living in the 21st century, you have unprecedented access to it. Saphho. Constantin Cavafy. Edna St Vincent Millay. Gerald Manley Hopkins. Hart Crane. Elizabeth Bishop. Gertrude Stein. Rimbaud. Verlaine. WH Auden. Thom Gunn. Frank O’Hara. Allen Ginsberg. John Ashbery.
And that work continues today. Some of the most celebrated poets of the last decades in Canada — Daphne Marlatt, Erin Moure, John Barton, Margaret Christakos, Nathalie Stephens — are queer. And queer poets are poised to be the leading figures of the next generation: Jen Currin, Anna Swanson, Trish Salah, and so on. Distinctive Canadian queer voices? RM Vaughan. Sky Gilbert. Billeh Nickerson. We cover the gamut.
So if you’re worried that you can’t be gay and a poet, don’t be. If you’re worried that you can’t express your sexuality — in all its butt-fucking and pussy-licking specificity — don’t be. If you’re worried that you can’t express your gender(s), don’t be. There is a place for you in Canadian literature.
I’ve noticed that many writers have work that revolves around particular obsessions. Do you find you have specific topics, themes or issues that you keep coming back to as a writer? If so, how does this impact your writing process?
Yes! Technology. Urban space. Sexuality. Writing and textuality. Consumer and popular culture. I will probably circle around these themes over and over again, my whole life. I think the best thing to do is embrace it and push it to the limit.
If you’re always writing about, love, say, maybe you should ask yourself, “Have I written about this from every angle? From the point of view of the lover, the object of affection, the scorned lover, a person who is not in love, a person who is in love with two people? Have I tried talking about love using a sonnet, a cento, a glosa? Have I written a poem about romantic love, filial love, paternal love, agape? Have I examined lust?”
Describe your favourite meal the way you’d describe it in a poem. We’re curious!
Frosting like epoxy, caulking,
shaving cream we drew tidings on,
then ate. The greedy treat sparkled,
it came on springy, infringed.
Our portions were bricks and mortar.
Gastrics unglued us; we were glass-eyed,
weepy, docile. Sugar hormones
clung uneasily to duty.
We were woozy, our enamels burned.
Already gluttons, nodding
like loose buttons on a sock puppet,
mmm, good, yes. We licked the tips, sighed
and crashed like an Excel spreadsheet,
yeah, it was perfect, or close to,
or who cares if it was perfect.
Do you find you are impacted by place? Does an urban space provide you with a lot of material for your writing? Have you lived/traveled outside of Canada and have those places/spaces influenced your work?
Yes, in terms of urban space. I find a lot of poets who live in cities still resort to poems about birds and wheat fields. Why is that? I write poems about cell phones and puffy coats and apartment towers because for most Canadians, that’s more likely to be an image they can conjure in their heads, compared to a red-throated lorikeet or a creeping thistle, or whatever.
What was the best advice you’ve received as a writer and what advice would you give to young writers who are trying to get published?
Read way more poetry than you write. Read deeply. Read classic poetry. Read Canadian poetry. Read contemporary poetry. Read queer poetry. Read, read, read. Every library in the country is full of poetry books just waiting for you.
And write way more than you publish. I know writers for whom the business of writing — networking, trying to get published, self-promotion — has crowded out actual writing. They will never be great poets. Pour your attention into writing the best poems you can, and when you’re tired and bleary eyed, use those parts of the day for trying to get published.
Interview with Marcus McCann (read original post with links here)
What inspired you to become a writer? At what age did you begin and what was your first published piece?
When I was a teenager, the Hamilton school board tolerated a little program run out of the back of the trunk of one of the English teachers, Meg Young. It was called the Student Literary Association; basically, it was a group of wayward, socially awkward teens who met twice a month in the basement of the Board of Ed building downtown. It was great. I met older teens who were also writers — Aidan Johnson, Marissa Achong, Julie with the monster Doc Martins, a guy named Nick who introduced us to the music of David Byrne… it was very important for me to have a network of young writers I could talk with. Anyway, I’m pretty sure my first published poetry was in the SLA’s annual anthology, circa 1997.
Partially thanks to the SLA, poetry became an obsession in my later teen years — when I was 17 or so, I gave up reading novels, because I thought that they couldn’t be art. Poetry, that was the one true art form. *Cough* My views have softened since then.
Could you tell us a bit about your writing process? Do you have a favourite place where you write? Do you need certain books/snacks/hats/animals/etc. with you? Do you prefer well-lit rooms with lots of windows, or darkness with ridiculous amounts of candles and incense? Are you a creature of routine (up at 6a.m., writing until noon when you break for a light lunch of arugula salad with a warm honey-dijon vinaigrette) or do you thrive on spontaneity and spend your writing time on the move from one greasy spoon to the next?
Before I get too caught up in my day – checking my Facebook and email, reading the news, what have you – I try to set aside at least two hours for reading and writing poetry, usually with my morning coffee. In my practice, I consider reading — reading deeply, trying to understand the mechanics of a poem, especially contemporary poetry — to be the same as writing. I try to save rewrites and fiddling with poems for after that.
What books are you reading right now and which authors do you love? What book have you read as an adult that you wish you had read when you were young?
Poetry books I’m reading right now: Robert Earl Stewart’s Campfire Radio Rhapsody and Craig Poile’s True Concessions.
Great books by contemporary Canadian poets, which I wish had been written when I was younger: Ken Babstock’s Airstream Land Yacht and Margaret Christakos’ Sooner. They’re both master classes in what a poem can be. Intimidating stuff. Oh, and Sina Queyras’ Expressway, which for me, is one of the few book-long poem projects that has resonated with me. Those three books are essential reading from the last 10 years.
And if you’re a gay guy writing about gay male experience, read Mark Doty. He’s the finest poet of the gay male experience writing today, probably. Or maybe Carl Philips is.
Do you find that being both a poet and a journalist is a complex experience? Do you feel the world exists dramatically differently through the lens of a poet vs. a journalist?
No more so, probably, than being a poet and a student, or a poet and an academic, or whatever. Poets have day jobs. That’s the reality. The essential question is one of, “when will I find the time?”
You published a large number of chapbooks before coming out with your first full-length poetry collection, Soft Where. Can you tell us a bit about your experience working with smaller independent presses and why you decided to focus on writing chapbooks?
How did it start? I went to dozens — literally dozens — of readings in Ottawa, some given by established poets, some given by emerging poets. I didn’t go to hock my own work; I went because I was interested in what poetry was being produced. Some of the readings I liked, some I didn’t. But I almost never, ever regretted going to readings.
I submitted poems to magazines — and got lots of rejections. At first, my acceptance rate was about 3 percent, meaning that for every 30 poems I sent out to magazines, one was accepted. It gradually improved. I took writing workshops — an early one with rob mclennan was especially helpful — and volunteered with a couple of local literary magazines, Bywords and the now defunct Yawp.
Out of that atmosphere of cross-pollination, my first chapbooks came to be. Heteroskpetical, with mclennan’s above/ground in 2007. Petty Illness Leaflet and the collaborative Basement Tapes with my own short-lived imprint, The Onion Union. The Tech/tonic Suite with Alberta’s Rubicon Press, which was the result of winning their annual chapbook contest. And Force Quit, from Toronto’s The Emergency Response Unit, thanks to connections I’d made in the small press world with Andrew Faulkner and, later, Leigh Nash.
Both magazine publishing and chapbook publishing were ways of testing myself and my poems. If anyone bought all of my chapbooks up until that point, then Soft Where, my first full length collection, would have had very little new to offer them. Some pieces had been published at least twice by then, first in magazines, then in chapbooks, before they were published in Soft Where. I’ve had a couple of very lucky breaks in my writing life, but micropresses, chapbooks and literary magazines were — are — essential to my development as a poet.
Between Soft Where and my second book, The Hard Return (which is coming out next spring with Insomniac) I did two additional chapbooks, Town in a long day of leaving (above/ground) and The Glass Jaw (Bywords), which, among other things, shows that chapbooks aren’t just a stepping stone to full-length book publishing, but are an end in themselves.
As a writer, do you feel that being openly queer has had any direct or indirect impact on your writing career and your success?
Let me start by saying this: if you’re a young queer writer, you have a long and proud history of queer poetry to draw on. It is a rich font of material, as deep and broad a poetic folio as any in the history of humankind. And living in the 21st century, you have unprecedented access to it. Saphho. Constantin Cavafy. Edna St Vincent Millay. Gerald Manley Hopkins. Hart Crane. Elizabeth Bishop. Gertrude Stein. Rimbaud. Verlaine. WH Auden. Thom Gunn. Frank O’Hara. Allen Ginsberg. John Ashbery.
And that work continues today. Some of the most celebrated poets of the last decades in Canada — Daphne Marlatt, Erin Moure, John Barton, Margaret Christakos, Nathalie Stephens — are queer. And queer poets are poised to be the leading figures of the next generation: Jen Currin, Anna Swanson, Trish Salah, and so on. Distinctive Canadian queer voices? RM Vaughan. Sky Gilbert. Billeh Nickerson. We cover the gamut.
So if you’re worried that you can’t be gay and a poet, don’t be. If you’re worried that you can’t express your sexuality — in all its butt-fucking and pussy-licking specificity — don’t be. If you’re worried that you can’t express your gender(s), don’t be. There is a place for you in Canadian literature.
I’ve noticed that many writers have work that revolves around particular obsessions. Do you find you have specific topics, themes or issues that you keep coming back to as a writer? If so, how does this impact your writing process?
Yes! Technology. Urban space. Sexuality. Writing and textuality. Consumer and popular culture. I will probably circle around these themes over and over again, my whole life. I think the best thing to do is embrace it and push it to the limit.
If you’re always writing about, love, say, maybe you should ask yourself, “Have I written about this from every angle? From the point of view of the lover, the object of affection, the scorned lover, a person who is not in love, a person who is in love with two people? Have I tried talking about love using a sonnet, a cento, a glosa? Have I written a poem about romantic love, filial love, paternal love, agape? Have I examined lust?”
Describe your favourite meal the way you’d describe it in a poem. We’re curious!
Frosting like epoxy, caulking,
shaving cream we drew tidings on,
then ate. The greedy treat sparkled,
it came on springy, infringed.
Our portions were bricks and mortar.
Gastrics unglued us; we were glass-eyed,
weepy, docile. Sugar hormones
clung uneasily to duty.
We were woozy, our enamels burned.
Already gluttons, nodding
like loose buttons on a sock puppet,
mmm, good, yes. We licked the tips, sighed
and crashed like an Excel spreadsheet,
yeah, it was perfect, or close to,
or who cares if it was perfect.
Do you find you are impacted by place? Does an urban space provide you with a lot of material for your writing? Have you lived/traveled outside of Canada and have those places/spaces influenced your work?
Yes, in terms of urban space. I find a lot of poets who live in cities still resort to poems about birds and wheat fields. Why is that? I write poems about cell phones and puffy coats and apartment towers because for most Canadians, that’s more likely to be an image they can conjure in their heads, compared to a red-throated lorikeet or a creeping thistle, or whatever.
What was the best advice you’ve received as a writer and what advice would you give to young writers who are trying to get published?
Read way more poetry than you write. Read deeply. Read classic poetry. Read Canadian poetry. Read contemporary poetry. Read queer poetry. Read, read, read. Every library in the country is full of poetry books just waiting for you.
And write way more than you publish. I know writers for whom the business of writing — networking, trying to get published, self-promotion — has crowded out actual writing. They will never be great poets. Pour your attention into writing the best poems you can, and when you’re tired and bleary eyed, use those parts of the day for trying to get published.
Sunday, October 09, 2011
Joe Blades' Chaudiere Books launch, October 27, 2011; Fredericton NB
27 October, Thursday, 7 pm.
@ Westminster Books,
445 King Street,
Fredericton, New Brunswick
Tel 1-800-561-READ to order autographed books.
Tristis Ward launching Bones of the Magus: All that Remains (Broken Jaw Press)
& Joe Blades (photo by Sophie Lavoie) launching Casemate Poems (Collected) (Chaudiere Books)
@ Westminster Books,
445 King Street,
Fredericton, New Brunswick
Tel 1-800-561-READ to order autographed books.
Tristis Ward launching Bones of the Magus: All that Remains (Broken Jaw Press)
& Joe Blades (photo by Sophie Lavoie) launching Casemate Poems (Collected) (Chaudiere Books)
Tuesday, September 27, 2011
Friday, September 23, 2011
Monty Reid reads Sunday, September 25 at Sasquatch (Ottawa)
Ottawa poet and musician Monty Reid reads as the feature at Sunday's Sasquatch Reading Series.
2-5pm, Royal Oak Pub, 161 Laurier Avenue (basement)
Open set + featured reader(s).
2-5pm, Royal Oak Pub, 161 Laurier Avenue (basement)
Open set + featured reader(s).
Tuesday, September 20, 2011
Monday, September 19, 2011
Chaudiere Books has moved!
please address all mailings, cheques, requests and communications, effective immediately, to:
Chaudiere Books
402 McLeod Street #3
Ottawa ON Canada
K2P 1A6
Friday, September 16, 2011
Pearl Pirie responds to a Gregory Betts essay;
On her blog, Pearl Pirie responds to (among other things) an essay by Gregory Betts, recently posted in the third issue of seventeen seconds: a journal of poetry + poetics.
Labels:
Gregory Betts,
Pearl Pirie,
seventeen seconds
Thursday, September 15, 2011
Monty Reid (workshop + reading) with George Amabile at the TREE Reading Series, Ottawa, October 11, 2011
George Amabile + Monty Reid
Tuesday October 11
Arts Court, 2 Daly Avenue, Ottawa
6:45pm Free Workshop
Monty Reid on You Are Here
In this series of 4 workshops, we will explore the spaces in and around Arts Court, the end result being a collaborative digital map with poems.
8:00pm Readings
Dead Poet Reading, Open Mic and Featured Reader(s).
George Amabile
Published in over 100 anthologies, magazines and journals, George Amabile is also the author of 7 books.
Monty Reid
Monty Reid's Disappointment Island won the Lampman-Scott Award for poetry, and he is also a 3-time winner of Alberta’s Stephansson Award for Poetry.
Tuesday October 11
Arts Court, 2 Daly Avenue, Ottawa
6:45pm Free Workshop
Monty Reid on You Are Here
In this series of 4 workshops, we will explore the spaces in and around Arts Court, the end result being a collaborative digital map with poems.
8:00pm Readings
Dead Poet Reading, Open Mic and Featured Reader(s).
George Amabile
Published in over 100 anthologies, magazines and journals, George Amabile is also the author of 7 books.
Monty Reid
Monty Reid's Disappointment Island won the Lampman-Scott Award for poetry, and he is also a 3-time winner of Alberta’s Stephansson Award for Poetry.
Labels:
George Amabile,
Monty Reid,
The TREE Reading Series
Saturday, September 10, 2011
Chaudiere Books author Marcus McCann reads at Toronto's Pivot Reading Series with Richard Krueger + Ralph Kolewe, Sept. 21, 2011
The Pivot train has started, and there’s no getting off, Toronto. Join us on September 21 for readings from three fantastic man-poets, Ralph Kolewe, Richard Krueger, and Marcus McCann. As always, at the Press Club, and as always, doors are at 8. Your gracious host is Elisabeth de Mariaffi.
Pivot Readings at the Press Club
Featuring Ralph Kolewe, Richard Krueger, and Marcus McCann
Featuring Ralph Kolewe, Richard Krueger, and Marcus McCann
Wednesday, September 21
The Press Club
850 Dundas Street West, Toronto
8 PM
PWYC
Ralph Kolewe lives in Toronto. He is co-editor of InfluencySalon.ca, the online iteration of Influency: A Toronto Literary Salon. He makes his living as a software engineer. He takes photographs, which have been shown in various venues (you can see some of them online here), and has recently begun to admit that he also writes poems (some of which you can read here).
Richard Krueger grew up in Prince George, British Columbia, where he eventually received his Bachelor’s degree in English from the University of Northern British Columbia in 1999. He was winner of the inaugural Barry McKinnon Chapbook Prize in 2006. The Monotony of Fatal Accidents, released this fall with BookThug, is his first book of poetry, though many of the poems that comprise it previously appeared in chapbook form.
Marcus McCann is a poet and journalist, the author of Soft Where and eight chapbooks, most recently The Glass Jaw and Town in a Long Day of Leaving. In Ottawa, he was the artistic director of the Transgress festival, facilitator of the Naughty Thoughts Book Club and a host of CKCU’s Literary Landscapes. He was the managing editor of Xtra in Toronto and Ottawa until this summer; this month [September], he started law school at U of T. His next full length collection, The Hard Return, will be released in April with Insomniac.
--
Pivot Readings at the Press Club
pivotreadings.ca
@PivotReadings
Every other Wednesday at the Press Club in Toronto, we present the writers breathing life into Canadian literary culture. Established and emerging, time-tested and fresh; we're what's happening in literature, right now. Your hosts are Elisabeth de Mariaffi and Sachiko Murakami.
Wednesday, August 31, 2011
a new interview with Pearl Pirie, by Sean Moreland
is now on-line, as part of the third issue of seventeen seconds: a journal of poetry + poetics, edited by rob mclennan.
Labels:
interview,
Pearl Pirie,
rob mclennan,
Sean Moreland,
seventeen seconds
Tuesday, August 30, 2011
Chaudiere Books' "Decalogue" moving sale!
To celebrate our recent move, and to make space for upcoming new titles, we're moving both of our Decalogue titles for half-price until the end of September: $10 instead of the retail $20.
The "Decalogue" series was built as a series of ongoing conversations, featuring ten Ottawa writers per volume, and Ottawa-specific artwork by a local artist on each cover.
Decalogue: ten Ottawa poets
edited by rob mclennan; with Stephen Brockwell, Michelle Desbarats, Anita Dolman, Anne Le Dressay, Karen Massey, Una McDonnell, rob mclennan, Max Middle, Monty Reid and Shane Rhodes.
for more information on the book and/or authors, check the link here.
$10
Decalogue 2: ten Ottawa fiction writers
edited by rob mclennan; with Emily Falvey, Matthew Firth, Gabriella Goliger, Alison Gresik, John-James Ford, Clare Latremouille, John Lavery, Nadine McInnis, rob mclennan and Ian Roy.
for more information on the book and/or authors, check the link here.
$10
For orders, add $5 for mailing. Paypal available via www.robmclennan.blogspot.com
or send cheques payable to rob mclennan, c/o 402 McLeod Street, #3, Ottawa ON K2P 1A6
Thursday, August 25, 2011
new Pearl Pirie chapbook by Corrupt Press, France!
Chaudiere author Pearl Pirie has gone across the ocean to launch her newest chapbook, Mammals of Hoarfrost, now available from French publisher Corrupt Press. As well, be sure to catch her "call and response" poems up at SPAO's Red Wall Gallery, 168 Dalhousie Street, Ottawa, until September 22.
Tuesday, August 23, 2011
Poem by Joe Blades up on Liptstick Press' Poems for Jack Layton
a new poem, "just jack" by Chaudiere Books author Joe Blades, now online at the Lipstick Press blog as part of an ongoing series on/for the late Jack Layton.
Thursday, August 18, 2011
Ottawa's Robert Kroetsch shortlist -- Pirie, McNair + Ridley/Earl - at the TREE Reading Series
The four Ottawa-based authors of the three (including the winner) of the nine titles shortlisted for this past year's Robert Kroetsch Award for Innovative Writing read as part of the next edition of The TREE Reading Series. Tuesday, August 23, 8pm at the Arts Court feature Chaudiere Books author Pearl Pirie (who won this year, with her award-winning manuscript appearing any minute now with Snare), Christine McNair (whose shortlisted title is forthcoming with BookThug in spring 2012) and collaborators Sandra Ridley and Amanda Earl.
Thursday, August 11, 2011
Saturday, August 06, 2011
Monty Reid participates in Wakefield, Quebec's Wakefest 2011
On Sunday, August 28, Ottawa poet Monty Reid will be reading as part of Wakefield, Quebec's Wakefest, in the "Plan 99 North Reading Series" at The Kaffé 1870 Pub, alongside Gil Adamson and Bruce Taylor, with another reading held the previous day featuring Pasha Malla, Iain Reid and Kevin Connolly. The readings each day run from 2:30pm to 4:00pm. For further information, check out the article in The Ottawa Citizen, or the Wakefest homepage.
Thursday, August 04, 2011
Michael Bryson's short story collection playlist, by Dani Couture
is now up on Dani Couture's blog.
Whether I write with the music on or the music off, there’s always a tune in my head. Often the song in my head will tell me what I’m thinking. I’ll find myself repeating “A Day in the Life” by The Beatles, for instance, and only then realize that I’ve been reflecting on a particular headline that I read on the way in to work: “I’ve read the news today, oh, boy.” My subconscious seems to transport messages to me through music. Of course, I also have an affinity to certain lyrics, certain phrases, certain rhetorical approaches: “Poets, priests, and politicians/ have words to thank for their positions,” sang The Police. That’s one of my favourite lyrics; it’s clear about the lack of clarity that can be provided by language (“Who’s Zoomin’ Who?” as Aretha Franklin said). You can see this theme in many of the songs on my list. Also, I dig the 2/4 beat, so the first song on the list was a natural. It’s very hard for me to select a 15 song list, so I’ve cheated a bit. As Janis Joplin said, “I’m ready, man!”
Whether I write with the music on or the music off, there’s always a tune in my head. Often the song in my head will tell me what I’m thinking. I’ll find myself repeating “A Day in the Life” by The Beatles, for instance, and only then realize that I’ve been reflecting on a particular headline that I read on the way in to work: “I’ve read the news today, oh, boy.” My subconscious seems to transport messages to me through music. Of course, I also have an affinity to certain lyrics, certain phrases, certain rhetorical approaches: “Poets, priests, and politicians/ have words to thank for their positions,” sang The Police. That’s one of my favourite lyrics; it’s clear about the lack of clarity that can be provided by language (“Who’s Zoomin’ Who?” as Aretha Franklin said). You can see this theme in many of the songs on my list. Also, I dig the 2/4 beat, so the first song on the list was a natural. It’s very hard for me to select a 15 song list, so I’ve cheated a bit. As Janis Joplin said, “I’m ready, man!”
Wednesday, August 03, 2011
new Pearl Pirie poems as part of SPAO's Call and Response
CALL AND RESPONSE
Poetic responses to photographs in the Red Wall Gallery.
at the School of Photographic Arts: Ottawa
Curated by: rob mclennan
Ongoing: August 5th, 2011 to July 31st, 2012
First Response
The Walls of Jerusalem; selected poems and process notes.
Writer: Pearl Pirie
Exhibition: Cities of Stone - People of Dust by Leslie Hossack
Vernissage: Friday August 5th, 2011, 18:00 - 21:00
On View: August 5th - September 2nd, 2011
The CALL AND RESPONSE project engages two creative communities in a year-long exchange of images and words. Artists showing work in the Red Wall Gallery will have their photographic statements poetically responded to by writers curated by rob mclennan.
This interaction can be experienced as poetry and images come together in the Red Wall Gallery for the duration of each exhibition. There will also be scheduled readings, and a poem/image card for each pairing, as well as the inclusion of selected images and poems in the next edition of Push/Pull magazine.
The Red Wall Gallery is located in SPAO at 168 Dalhousie, at the corner of Bruyère, in the Byward Market. Viewing/reading hours are from Monday to Friday 10:00 -18:00, and Saturdays from 10:00-15:00.
Future shows will have responses by Ottawa poets Monty Reid and Sandra Ridley.
For more info contact: 613.562.3824 or info@spao.ca
Poetic responses to photographs in the Red Wall Gallery.
at the School of Photographic Arts: Ottawa
Curated by: rob mclennan
Ongoing: August 5th, 2011 to July 31st, 2012
First Response
The Walls of Jerusalem; selected poems and process notes.
Writer: Pearl Pirie
Exhibition: Cities of Stone - People of Dust by Leslie Hossack
Vernissage: Friday August 5th, 2011, 18:00 - 21:00
On View: August 5th - September 2nd, 2011
The CALL AND RESPONSE project engages two creative communities in a year-long exchange of images and words. Artists showing work in the Red Wall Gallery will have their photographic statements poetically responded to by writers curated by rob mclennan.
This interaction can be experienced as poetry and images come together in the Red Wall Gallery for the duration of each exhibition. There will also be scheduled readings, and a poem/image card for each pairing, as well as the inclusion of selected images and poems in the next edition of Push/Pull magazine.
The Red Wall Gallery is located in SPAO at 168 Dalhousie, at the corner of Bruyère, in the Byward Market. Viewing/reading hours are from Monday to Friday 10:00 -18:00, and Saturdays from 10:00-15:00.
Future shows will have responses by Ottawa poets Monty Reid and Sandra Ridley.
For more info contact: 613.562.3824 or info@spao.ca
Labels:
Monty Reid,
Pearl Pirie,
rob mclennan,
Sandra Ridley
Monday, August 01, 2011
Sontag & Kael: Criticism is demolition? an essay by Michael Bryson
[photo by Kate O'Rourke] posted at Numero Cinq.
Thursday, July 21, 2011
article on Marcus McCann in Northumberland Today for tonight's reading in Cobourg ON
Boundary-pushing poet reads in Cobourg tonight
Posted July 21, 2011
COBOURG -"In my work, I like that people point out its playfulness. It is funny. It is subversive," says Ottawa poet Marcus McCann.
"When I'm writing, I'm always dancing this dance with my inner-critic, saying, 'Can I get away with this? What if I push it a little further?'"
The results of McCann's attempts can be heard at the Cobourg Poetry Workshop's 3rd Thursday Reading Series this evening at Meet At 66 King East. Since leaving university five years ago, McCann has been managing editor of Ottawa's Capital Xtra, the lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans-gender newspaper, a job he is leaving "to move on; to go back to school."
Author of Soft Where, McCann has been described as a poetic gymnast, to which he replies, "Serious gymnasts aren't at play at all. It's punishing work, right? Poetry is fun, but that doesn't mean it's not also hard work."
One critic said of McCann's work, "I love the leaps and jumps of his writing. I love the way the language flies."
Readings are a way to share new work, McCann says.
"I was once told that they should be, in a way, a 'best of' selection. They are also a way to share new work, stuff you're excited about."
McCann has been working against what he calls "the Canadian Rural Gothic" -- poems about nature, farming.
"The poems I'm most likely to read are urban, infused with technology, frank about sexuality and drug use," he says.
"But I'm not trying to be confrontational in my reading, and am willing to meet people half-way."
Also reading this evening will be Cobourg's highly regarded poet Wayne Schlepp and, making his first appearance at the 3rd Thursday Reading Series, Peterborough poet Stephen Kennedy.
Doors open at 7 p.m. with the readings commencing at 7:30. Go to www.poetrycobourg.ca for further details.
Posted July 21, 2011
COBOURG -"In my work, I like that people point out its playfulness. It is funny. It is subversive," says Ottawa poet Marcus McCann.
"When I'm writing, I'm always dancing this dance with my inner-critic, saying, 'Can I get away with this? What if I push it a little further?'"
The results of McCann's attempts can be heard at the Cobourg Poetry Workshop's 3rd Thursday Reading Series this evening at Meet At 66 King East. Since leaving university five years ago, McCann has been managing editor of Ottawa's Capital Xtra, the lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans-gender newspaper, a job he is leaving "to move on; to go back to school."
Author of Soft Where, McCann has been described as a poetic gymnast, to which he replies, "Serious gymnasts aren't at play at all. It's punishing work, right? Poetry is fun, but that doesn't mean it's not also hard work."
One critic said of McCann's work, "I love the leaps and jumps of his writing. I love the way the language flies."
Readings are a way to share new work, McCann says.
"I was once told that they should be, in a way, a 'best of' selection. They are also a way to share new work, stuff you're excited about."
McCann has been working against what he calls "the Canadian Rural Gothic" -- poems about nature, farming.
"The poems I'm most likely to read are urban, infused with technology, frank about sexuality and drug use," he says.
"But I'm not trying to be confrontational in my reading, and am willing to meet people half-way."
Also reading this evening will be Cobourg's highly regarded poet Wayne Schlepp and, making his first appearance at the 3rd Thursday Reading Series, Peterborough poet Stephen Kennedy.
Doors open at 7 p.m. with the readings commencing at 7:30. Go to www.poetrycobourg.ca for further details.
Monday, July 11, 2011
Michael Bryson reading on YouTube, from The TREE Reading Series,
Michael Bryson's featured reading at The TREE Reading Series, November 24, 2009, is now posted on YouTube.
Thursday, July 07, 2011
Monty Reid, Pearl Pirie, rob mclennan, etc. now up at Sachiko Murakami's Project Rebuild
New, renovated poems by Chaudiere authors Monty Reid, Pearl Pirie and rob mclennan now up at Sachiko Murakami's Project Rebuild, alongside plenty of others, by nikki reimer, Rita Wong, Jason Christie, Christine McNair, Amanda Earl, Meredith Quartermain, David McGimpsey, Jacqueline Turner, Gary Barwin, a. rawlings, Justin Million, Roger Farr, Soma Feldmar, Angela Hibbs, Larissa Lai and plenty of others. Check regularly for updates, or, participate yourself!
Labels:
Monty Reid,
Pearl Pirie,
Project Rebuild,
rob mclennan,
Sachiko Murakami
Saturday, June 18, 2011
Thursday, June 16, 2011
a review mentioning some of Pearl Pirie's non-Chaudiere works,
a brief review of some recent of her works, including her Obvious Epiphanies chapbook, and The Dusty Owl Quarterly, here;
Monday, June 06, 2011
Pearl Pirie's (etc) random acts of poetry; a report by Kathryn Hunt;
Pearl Pirie [photo credit: Brian Pirie] & others' random acts of poetry; a report by Kathryn Hunt.
Labels:
Arc Poetry Magazine,
Brian Pirie,
Kathryn Hunt,
Pearl Pirie,
review
Tuesday, May 31, 2011
new from chaudiere books: Joe Blades' Casemate Poems (Collected)
Casemate Poems (Collected)
by Joe Blades
published by Chaudiere Books
May 2011
An earlier, much smaller edition appeared as a limited-edition book produced by Waterloo, Ontario publisher Widows and orphans in 2004 as casemate poems, later translated and published in Belgrade. As Blades himself wrote of that earlier edition:
(translated from the Serbian by Dubravka Đurić.)
author bio:
Joe Blades has been giving readings, performing and publishing his poetry since 1980.
Blades was born and raised in Nova Scotia. He's a graduate of NSCAD (BFA (Studio Major: Intermedia), 1988), and he recently completed a Film & Television Certificate Program through the NB Filmmakers' Cooperative. He is also an alumni of the Banff Centre, Maritime Writers Workshop, Sage Hill Writing Experience, and the Simon Fraser University Book Publishing Immersion Workshop.
His poetry and art have appeared in over 50 trade and chapbook anthologies and CDs, and in numerous periodicals. Blades has authored or edited 30 poetry chapbooks and limited edition artist books. His five full-length poetry books are Cover Makes a Set (SpareTime Editions, 1990), River Suite (Insomniac Press, 1998), Open Road West (Broken Jaw Press, 2000, 2001) and Casemate Poems (Widows & Orphans, 2004). Serbian translations of River Suite as Recna svita in the Slike iz kanade: Tri kanadska pesnika (SKC Nis), and Casemate Poems as Pesme iz kazamata (i.p. Rad), were published in 2005.
various upcoming Joe Blades readings/lectures/residencies:
June 1, 7:30 pm: Joe Blades reads at Literary Translators' Association of Canada members &
friends. Congress 2011. Alden Nowlan House/Windsor Castle Bar, 676 Windsor St, Fredericton, NB.
June, 3-4:15 pm. Panel/paper presentation. Poetry of Place: The Confluence of Coasts, Continents and Consciousness by Jennifer Pazienza & Joe Blades. Congress 2011. Rm 210, Marshall d’Avray Hall, Room/Salle 210, UNB Fredericton, Fredericton, NB.
June 9-20: Toronto, Brno, Berlin (unfortunately no scheduled readings, as yet)
July 9-15: Fredericton Arts Alliance Artists in Residence 2011 Summer Series, at the Barracks Fine Craft Shops, Queen St, Fredericton, NB. A week-long residency. Joe Blades, writer/book artist, paired with Leigh Merritt, emerging potter. Will include reading(s).
October 1: Joe Blades and Broken Jaw Press at Feria Latinoamericana de Libros y Revistas/Latinamerican Fair of Books and Journals. Ottawa, ON. Para más información o registrarse enviar un correo electrónico a info@artemapale.com o llamar al 613-828-8151.
check here for updates from the author.
$18.00 CAN/$18.00 US
isbn 978-097834281-4
available to bookstores through LitDisCo
or directly through the publisher at rob_mclennan@hotmail.com
or send $20 (payable to rob mclennan; outside Canada, $20 US) directly to the press at:
Chaudiere Books
858 Somerset Street West, main floor
Ottawa ON Canada K1R 6R7
check out the link here at chaudierebooks.com
by Joe Blades
published by Chaudiere Books
May 2011
An earlier, much smaller edition appeared as a limited-edition book produced by Waterloo, Ontario publisher Widows and orphans in 2004 as casemate poems, later translated and published in Belgrade. As Blades himself wrote of that earlier edition:
The two suites of “casemate poems” were written during two one-week artist-in-residence stints in 2003 in Fredericton, New Brunswick. These were public, interactive, residencies with visitors passing though the casemate workspace with two concurrent artists-in-residence scheduled for any given week. During his residency, Blades had a typewriter set up on a table facing the open doorway of the casemate. It was always primed with a sheet of paper. In the tradition of writers in storefronts, as Blades finished composing each poem, it was attached to the casemate wall. Blades also took photographs inside and from within the casemate looking outward: images of the casemate itself, of his art in progress, photographs of the weaving looms, of the potter and pottery turned.
In this volume, Blades’ poems and photographs are combined to produce a work that reflects the immediacy of their composition while enabling the reader to experience Blades' writing at their own pace.From: Pesme iz kazamata (Beograd: Rad, 2005)
To read Canadian poet and artist Joe Blades’ book of poetry casemate poems means to get knowledge about one very specific way of understanding poetry today. […] Blades’ poetry is written by activating different layers of human knowledge and by articulation of this knowledge, for example, in narrations of history and geography. He moves in time (historical perspective) and in space (for example, actual events in the world at the time, such as the attack on the World Trade Center, or pointing to the contemporary racist attitudes of specific countercultures.—Dubravka Đurić
(translated from the Serbian by Dubravka Đurić.)
author bio:
Joe Blades has been giving readings, performing and publishing his poetry since 1980.
Blades was born and raised in Nova Scotia. He's a graduate of NSCAD (BFA (Studio Major: Intermedia), 1988), and he recently completed a Film & Television Certificate Program through the NB Filmmakers' Cooperative. He is also an alumni of the Banff Centre, Maritime Writers Workshop, Sage Hill Writing Experience, and the Simon Fraser University Book Publishing Immersion Workshop.
His poetry and art have appeared in over 50 trade and chapbook anthologies and CDs, and in numerous periodicals. Blades has authored or edited 30 poetry chapbooks and limited edition artist books. His five full-length poetry books are Cover Makes a Set (SpareTime Editions, 1990), River Suite (Insomniac Press, 1998), Open Road West (Broken Jaw Press, 2000, 2001) and Casemate Poems (Widows & Orphans, 2004). Serbian translations of River Suite as Recna svita in the Slike iz kanade: Tri kanadska pesnika (SKC Nis), and Casemate Poems as Pesme iz kazamata (i.p. Rad), were published in 2005.
various upcoming Joe Blades readings/lectures/residencies:
June 1, 7:30 pm: Joe Blades reads at Literary Translators' Association of Canada members &
friends. Congress 2011. Alden Nowlan House/Windsor Castle Bar, 676 Windsor St, Fredericton, NB.
June, 3-4:15 pm. Panel/paper presentation. Poetry of Place: The Confluence of Coasts, Continents and Consciousness by Jennifer Pazienza & Joe Blades. Congress 2011. Rm 210, Marshall d’Avray Hall, Room/Salle 210, UNB Fredericton, Fredericton, NB.
June 9-20: Toronto, Brno, Berlin (unfortunately no scheduled readings, as yet)
July 9-15: Fredericton Arts Alliance Artists in Residence 2011 Summer Series, at the Barracks Fine Craft Shops, Queen St, Fredericton, NB. A week-long residency. Joe Blades, writer/book artist, paired with Leigh Merritt, emerging potter. Will include reading(s).
October 1: Joe Blades and Broken Jaw Press at Feria Latinoamericana de Libros y Revistas/Latinamerican Fair of Books and Journals. Ottawa, ON. Para más información o registrarse enviar un correo electrónico a info@artemapale.com o llamar al 613-828-8151.
check here for updates from the author.
$18.00 CAN/$18.00 US
isbn 978-097834281-4
available to bookstores through LitDisCo
or directly through the publisher at rob_mclennan@hotmail.com
or send $20 (payable to rob mclennan; outside Canada, $20 US) directly to the press at:
Chaudiere Books
858 Somerset Street West, main floor
Ottawa ON Canada K1R 6R7
check out the link here at chaudierebooks.com
Saturday, May 28, 2011
3 Chaudiere poets at mother tongue books (Ottawa),
Thursday, June 16, 2011;
1067 Bank Street (at Sunnyside)
doors 7pm, reading 7:30
lovingly hosted by Christine McNair
author bios:
Monty Reid is an Ottawa writer and gardener, with recent trade collections from Chaudiere Books and Brick Books. His most recent publications are Site Conditions (Apt 9 Press) and Garden unit chapbooks from obvious epiphanies press, above/ground press, Laurel ReedBooks and others.
Pearl Pirie rides trains when she can. Watch for her books, chapbooks and leaflets at the Ottawa small press fair.
rob mclennan is the author of many things. His most recent book is the long poem Glengarry (Talonbooks).
1067 Bank Street (at Sunnyside)
doors 7pm, reading 7:30
lovingly hosted by Christine McNair
author bios:
Monty Reid is an Ottawa writer and gardener, with recent trade collections from Chaudiere Books and Brick Books. His most recent publications are Site Conditions (Apt 9 Press) and Garden unit chapbooks from obvious epiphanies press, above/ground press, Laurel ReedBooks and others.
Pearl Pirie rides trains when she can. Watch for her books, chapbooks and leaflets at the Ottawa small press fair.
rob mclennan is the author of many things. His most recent book is the long poem Glengarry (Talonbooks).
Labels:
Monty Reid,
Mother Tongue Books,
Pearl Pirie,
reading,
rob mclennan
Tuesday, May 24, 2011
Friday, May 20, 2011
Chaudiere Books participating in Niagara Falls, Toronto + Ottawa small press fairs;
Chaudiere Books will be participating in small press book fairs (with perhaps a new surprise or two) in:
Niagara Falls, ON: A Book Affair, Saturday, June 4th, 2011, hosted by The Niagara Literary Arts Festival. information here.
Toronto ON: The Toronto Small Press Book Fair, Sunday, June 19,2011. information here.
Ottawa ON: the ottawa small press book fair, Saturday, June 25, 2011, hosted by the small press action network - ottawa (span-o). information here.
for further information on small press book fairs across Canada, check out the small press book fair blog.
hopefully we will see you at one, if not all of these! best,
Niagara Falls, ON: A Book Affair, Saturday, June 4th, 2011, hosted by The Niagara Literary Arts Festival. information here.
Toronto ON: The Toronto Small Press Book Fair, Sunday, June 19,2011. information here.
Ottawa ON: the ottawa small press book fair, Saturday, June 25, 2011, hosted by the small press action network - ottawa (span-o). information here.
for further information on small press book fairs across Canada, check out the small press book fair blog.
hopefully we will see you at one, if not all of these! best,
Wednesday, May 18, 2011
Marcus McCann interviewed by Kevin Spenst;
an interview with Marcus McCann now up on Kevin Spenst's website, alongside various other Chaudiere & non-Chaudiere authors; thanks, Kevin!
Friday, May 13, 2011
Chaudiere authors Monty Reid + rob mclennan read at The Niagara Literary Arts Festival, June 3, 2011;
Friday, June, 3, 2011 7pm; This event is part of THE NIAGARA LITERARY ARTS FESTIVAL; http://www.greyborders.jig • rob mclennan (The Ottawa City Project)• Monty Reid (Disappointment Island)• Kees Kaptyn • James Takeo • Sami’s , 87 East Main Street, Welland with a small press book fair happening the following day: http://smallpressbookfair. |
Monday, May 09, 2011
Chaudiere Books mourns Gatineau author John Lavery (Dec 31, 1949-May 8, 2011);
[John Lavery, left, with Stephen Brockwell; a group of us having drinks at The Carleton Tavern last year, for no reason] an obit posted today here, on rob mclennan's blog;
Sunday, May 08, 2011
Monday, May 02, 2011
Monty Reid a poetry finalist for National Magazine Awards;
Chaudiere Books author Monty Reid (Disappointment Island / Decalogue: Ten Ottawa Poets) is a poetry finalist for the National Magazine Awards for three poems published in Event magazine, alongside eight other poets including Ottawa poets Shane Rhodes (Decalogue: Ten Ottawa Poets) and David O'Meara. Congrats Monty! Congratulations all! The Gold, Silver and Honourable Mentions will be announced in Toronto on June 10, 2011 at a big gala (of course). Tickets for said gala can be purchased here.
Labels:
Monty Reid,
National Magazine Awards,
Shane Rhodes
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
Pearl Pirie: two poems posted for National Poetry Month;
Our Pearl Pirie [photo by rob mclennan] has two new poems posted for National Poetry Month, with a visual piece posted at Amanda Earl's AngelHousePress National Poetry Month page, and her poem "Sandwiched," up at a similar site hosted by The League of Canadian Poets, lovingly curated by Winnipeg poet Ariel Gordon.
Wednesday, April 13, 2011
A little tiny interview with Monty Reid
a little tiny interview with Chaudiere Books author Monty Reid by Kevin Spenst. Check out the entire (ongoing) series, which focuses on Spenst's Vancouver, but with plenty of interesting Ottawa content, including Christine McNair, Pearl Pirie + rob mclennan.
Labels:
Christine McNair,
interview,
Kevin Spenst,
Monty Reid,
Pearl Pirie,
rob mclennan
Thursday, April 07, 2011
Tuesday, March 29, 2011
Chaudiere Books author Pearl Pirie at the Ottawa Festival, May 1, 2011
Pearl Pirie reads alongside Gillian Sze and Lorna Crozier at the spring edition of the Ottawa International Writers Festival; the poetry cabaret is hosted by Ottawa poet Sandra Ridley; details at the festival website, here.
Monday, March 28, 2011
rob mclennan's The Ottawa City Project (2007); "an old poem embedded in thoughts on my mother"
A piece I wrote on one of the poems from my poetry collection, The Ottawa City Project (Chaudiere Books, 2007) now up at Open Book Toronto;
Thursday, March 17, 2011
Saturday, March 12, 2011
Friday, March 11, 2011
Marcus McCann interviewed (posted online) on CKCU's Literary Landscapes;
Chaudiere Books author Marcus McCann was interviewed on CKCU's Literary Landscapes yesterday (posted online) by Christine McNair for tonight's McCann/Reid lecture as part of Ottawa's VERSeFest;
Tuesday, March 01, 2011
Monday, February 28, 2011
Pearl Pirie shortlisted for the 2011 Robert Kroetsch Award for Innovative Poetry
Chaudiere Books author Pearl Pirie is shortlisted (1 of 9) for the 2011 Robert Kroetsch Award for Innovative Poetry; winner to be announced soon at www.snarebooks.wordpress.com;
Labels:
Pearl Pirie,
Robert Kroetsch Award,
Snare Books
Thursday, February 17, 2011
Niagara, a new short story by Michael Bryson
is now online at Numero Cinq; author photo by Kate O'Rourke,
Friday, February 11, 2011
Wednesday, January 26, 2011
Sunday, January 23, 2011
little tiny review of Pearl Pirie's been shed bore,
"The mysterious financial and postal divides were crossed, and I got Pearl Pirie's "Been Shed Bore" from Ottawa.The promos are packed with some very complex tropes and ricochets somewhat like post-av, but inside I found some highly refined linguistic acrobatics, riffing, and lang-flirt as in "just kiss me then":
"...
a tangle, a lip of the tongue,
some flaw in the ointment
the flu in the augment? more/less
the fly in the argyleness,
the flay in the target, bite some
sorry for that sleep of the tonne
..."
Maybe it was the dire week, but the
clever little 10-20 line engines
of brilliant sass hit the spot this weekend."
the rest of his post here; thanks!
"...
a tangle, a lip of the tongue,
some flaw in the ointment
the flu in the augment? more/less
the fly in the argyleness,
the flay in the target, bite some
sorry for that sleep of the tonne
..."
Maybe it was the dire week, but the
clever little 10-20 line engines
of brilliant sass hit the spot this weekend."
the rest of his post here; thanks!
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
Two upcoming Marcus McCann readings, Cobourg + Toronto;
Ottawa/Toronto poet Marcus McCann has two upcoming events:
* Brockton Writers Series (April 6, 7pm. St Anne's Church, 270 Gladstone Ave. Toronto. Free/PWYC.
* Cobourg Poetry Workshop, with Glenda Jackson and Wayne Schlepp, July 21, 2011. Doors at 7:00 pm. Reading at 7:30pm. 66 King St E, Cobourg, ON.
photo credit: Michael Erickson,
* Brockton Writers Series (April 6, 7pm. St Anne's Church, 270 Gladstone Ave. Toronto. Free/PWYC.
* Cobourg Poetry Workshop, with Glenda Jackson and Wayne Schlepp, July 21, 2011. Doors at 7:00 pm. Reading at 7:30pm. 66 King St E, Cobourg, ON.
photo credit: Michael Erickson,
Wednesday, January 12, 2011
Chaudiere author Anita Dolman at The Dusty Owl Reading Series, Jan 16;
Ottawa writer Anita Dolman (featured in Decalogue: ten Ottawa poets) is featured at the Dusty Owl Reading Series, Sunday January 16, 5pm; open set and featured reader; see her "12 or 20 questions" here;
Labels:
Anita Dolman,
Dusty Owl Reading Series,
reading
Tuesday, January 11, 2011
Chaudiere Books author Pearl Pirie at the Pivot Reading Series, Toronto
Wednesday, February 23, 2011
8pm-10pm
The Press Club, 850 Dundas Street West, Toronto
The Pivot with Ottawa’s own Pearl Pirie, reading from Been Shed Bore (Chaudiere Books) alongside Carolyn Smart + Adam Seelig; admission free, three featured readers every second Wednesday;
Labels:
Pearl Pirie,
reading,
The Pivot Reading Series
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