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Twenty-first Issue
Volume 10, No. 1
 
features

Humanizing History
By Ami Sands Brodoff

War And Movies
By Faustus Salvador


fiction

Bonbons Assortis/assorted Candies
Reviewed by Ian McGillis

Dead Man's Float
Reviewed by Sarah Steinberg

Dreadful Paris
Reviewed by Adriana Palanca

Last Chance To Renew
Reviewed by Joel Yanofsky

North Of 9/11
Reviewed by Richmond Wong

Static Control
Reviewed by Joan E. Cadham

The Black Notebook
Reviewed by Ian McGillis

The Man Who Wanted To Drink Up The Sea
Reviewed by Dimitri Nasrallah

The Mole Chronicles
Reviewed by Dylan Young

The Ratcatcher
Reviewed by Claude Lalumière



non-fiction

Fighting From Home: The Second World War In Verdun, Quebec
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik

Girlhood: Redefining The Limits
Reviewed by Andrea Belcham

Oliver Jones: The Musician, The Man: A Biography
Reviewed by Doug Rollins

Prisoners Of The Home Front: German Pows And 'enemy Aliens' In Southern Quebec, 1940 - 1946
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik

Terra Nostra, 1550 - 1950: The Stories Behind Canada's Maps
Reviewed by Ted Smith

The Teeth Of Time: Remembering Pierre Elliot Trudeau
Reviewed by Aparna Sanyal

Translating Montreal: Episodes In The Life Of A Divided City
Reviewed by Elise Moser


non-fiction at a glance

Schwartz's Hebrew Delicatessen: The Story
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik

Smart Shopping
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik


poetry

Decreation: Poetry, Essays, Opera
Reviewed by Jon Paul Fiorentino

Horror Vacui
Reviewed by Bert Almon

I, Nadja And Other Poems
Reviewed by Bert Almon

Let Me Go!
Reviewed by Bert Almon

Out To Dry In Cape Breton
Reviewed by Bert Almon


young readers

Augustine
Reviewed by Carol-Ann Hoyte

Christmas Eve Magic
Reviewed by Carol-Ann Hoyte

In The Days Of Sand And Stars
Reviewed by Carol-Ann Hoyte

Our Game: The History Of Hockey In Canada
Reviewed by Carol-Ann Hoyte

Simon Says: Seasons
Reviewed by Carol-Ann Hoyte

Taming Horrible Harry
Reviewed by Carol-Ann Hoyte

The Birdman
Reviewed by Carol-Ann Hoyte

The Mayor's Missing Cat
Reviewed by Carol-Ann Hoyte



Out To Dry In Cape Breton
By Anita Lahey
$16
paper 79 pp.
Véhicule Press (Signal Editions) 1-55065-209-5
poetry

Out to Dry in Cape Breton

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New Document Traditionally, first poetry collections are slim volumes, and so prematurely published that their authors later try to buy or steal all the surviving copies. Anita Lahey has published a substantial first book, and has shown that formalism can thrive in Canada.

In Out to Dry in Cape Breton, she writes pantoums (a pantoum is a repetitive form adopted by Malayan poetics: the second and fourth line of each stanza form the first and third lines of the following stanza) and she has even revived ottava rima, a form that goes all the way back to Bocaccio and is best known in English as the form for Byron's Don Juan. Lahey is one of those poets (Christine Wisenthal is another) who can use housework to examine both domestic life and feminist issues. Who would have thought that brilliant poetry could use hanging out laundry as a focus, as Lahey does in the first section of her book? Of course, hanging out laundry now is a rare activity: we know right away that she is writing about people who don't have dryers. One poem in the section, "The Silver Buggy Handbook," uses a shopping cart as its focus. We see the creation of the buggy in a foundry, its use in supermarkets, and then the shock: it becomes a homeless person's receptacle for a pitiful assortment of possessions. The details in the first two-thirds of the book have the ring of authentic experience, but 16 of them are in fact based on paintings and photographs. Lahey can be added to the list of Canadian practitioners of the ekphrasis, the poem about works of art, a group with distinguished members like Shawna Lemay, Stephanie Bolster, Anne Simpson, and John Reibetanz. Some bright academic might explain this phenomenon one day.

The last third of Lahey's collection, "Cape Breton Relative," is a prize-winning sequence about a return to Cape Breton to visit relatives. The poems are self-deprecating, often hilariously so, with a second-person narrator that enable Lahey to look at the protagonist with some irony, though the writing appears autobiographical. The homecoming includes conversations with salty-tongued relatives, and a rather funny attempt to learn how to jig mackerel. The dark side of Cape Breton's industrial past is revealed when the narrator shows the notorious Sydney tar ponds to a friend who has never been to Cape Breton. The viewpoint of the poem is worked beautifully: the "you" of the poems is both an insider (because of her past on the island) and an outsider (to the relatives who sense the distance created by her off-island experience). The range of poetic forms in the sequence is wide: couplets, three-line stanzas, rhymed quatrains, sonnets, four poems in ottava rima, a pantoum - and I may have failed to recognize others. The only real misstep in Out to Dry in Cape Breton is a monologue purportedly by a long distance trucker: its mixture of coarseness and high-flown language does not convince. But that is a small lapse in a first-rate book. Lahey may not be able to jig mackerel, but she can write a poem with consummate skill.

Bert Almon's next book, "A Ghost in Waterloo Station," is due from Brindle and Glass in 2007.



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