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Twenty-fifth issue
Volume 11, No. 2
 

features

A Place For Everything
By Faustus Salvador

Empires And Dinner
By Neil Scotten


fiction

Blood Pudding
Reviewed by Dan Gillean

Dance Of The Suitors
Reviewed by Adriana Palanca

Days Of Sand
Reviewed by Anne Chudobiak

Nikolski
Reviewed by Saleema Nawaz

Return To Arcadia
Reviewed by Andrea Belcham

Seven Openings Of The Head
Reviewed by Robert Kotyk

The Cruellest Month
Reviewed by Elspeth Redmond

The Dells
Reviewed by Elspeth Redmond

The Postman's Round
Reviewed by Anne Chudobiak

The Violets Of Usambara
Reviewed by Danielle LaFrance



non-fiction

Bottomfeeder: How To Eat Ethically In A World Of Vanishing Seafood
Reviewed by Louise Fabiani

Fred Taylor: Brother In The Shadows
Reviewed by Mark Heffernan

Mordecai Richler: Leaving St. Urbain
Reviewed by Ian McGillis

The Sexual Paradox: Extreme Men, Gifted Women And The Real Gender Gap
Reviewed by David Ravensbergen

Thomas D'arcy Mcgee: Volume 1
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik

Travels In Wonderland
Reviewed by Linda Besner


non-fiction at a glance

A Guide To Contemporary Architecture In Montreal
Reviewed by Ian McGillis

Green Boughs And Singing Birds
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik

No Limits
Reviewed by Margaret Goldik


poetry

Dismantled Secrets
Reviewed by Dr. Bert Almon

Radius Of Light
Reviewed by Dr. Bert Almon

Sympathy For The Couriers
Reviewed by Dr. Bert Almon

The Freedom I Stole
Reviewed by Dr. Bert Almon

Winter Tennis
Reviewed by Aparna Sanyal


young readers

Break On Through
Reviewed by Annie Murray

Come On, Dad! 75 Things For Fathers And Sons To Do Together
Reviewed by Annie Murray

Come On, Mom! 75 Things For Mothers And Daughters To Do Together
Reviewed by By Annie Murray

Fakie
Reviewed by Annie Murray

I Don't Want To Go
Reviewed by Annie Murray

Pier 21: Stories From Near And Far
Reviewed by Annie Murray

Pink
Reviewed by Annie Murray

Please, Louise!
Reviewed by Annie Murray

Zibby Payne & The Party Problem
Reviewed by Annie Murray




The Freedom I Stole
By Jason
$14
paper 111 pp.
Cumulus Press 978-0-9782474-4-7
poetry

The Freedom I Stole

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New Document Jason "Blackbird" Selman is a performance poet and jazz trumpeter who plays with the music collective Kalm Unity. A performance poet can't always reduce his art to the page, and jazz seems resistant to being fixed in form, but in The Freedom I Stole, Selman generally succeeds. Most of the poems are meditations on important jazz performances and provide a note at the end specifying the artist, album, and date of recording, but not, fortunately, all the personnel. Some of the performances selected have strong social relevance, others represent sheer joy and inventiveness. The verse responding to the songs shows its musical roots mostly through parallelism. Interestingly, Selman's verbal imagination is freer in the occasional prose poems, where he is less abstract. The most interesting parts of the book are not the reflections on music but the poems written about Selman's trips to Cuba and Barbados. In July 2006, he went to Cuba with a hip hop group. He says in his useful preface that he wanted to write a poem a day-the jazz spirit of spontaneity, no doubt-but at first was too much in awe of the country to keep the pace. He eventually picked up speed, and the diary-like entries show a mind enthralled by a rich new cultural experience. The poems are more concrete and more passionate than the earlier reflections on songs. Better still are the poems about his visit to Barbados in December 2006. Barbados was the birthplace of his parents, but not his own, and he is aware that he is an outsider to the Caribbean as well as an outsider to American jazz. This outsider's point of view is both a deprivation and an opportunity, as many an artist has proven, and Selman has the skill to use the opportunity.

Bert Almon's latest book is "A Ghost in Waterloo Station" (Brindle and Glass)



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