Canadian poetry

  • A beautiful rebellion : poems

    Creator

    Bouvier, Rita

    Abstract

    This evocative new poetry collection speaks with a fierce tenderness of many aspects of the poet's life: a childhood spent on the banks of the Churchill River, the death of a beloved one, the struggle to try to find forgiveness for wrongs done and the weariness of trying to redress those wrongs. And, most poignantly, a beautiful rebellion reaches one hand back to Louis Riel and one hand forward to future Metis generations.

    Audience
    Adult**
    Publisher (Source)

    [Calgary, Alberta]

    Thistledown Press

    Not specified
  • In Flanders Fields and Other Poems

    Creator

    McCrae, John

    Macphail, Sir Andrew

    Gnarowski, Michael

    Abstract

    “In Flanders Fields,” the iconic poem which gives its title to this collection of poems and selected prose, is one of Canada’s — and the world’s — best known poems of the Great War. It was written in 1915 by Canadian John McCrae, an artillery man, poet, and medical doctor, upon the death of a friend and fellow soldier during the Second Battle of Ypres in 1915. This is a faithful reissue of the Canadian first edition of McCrae’s writings, originally issued by his friends in 1919 in his honour and memory.

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    Dundurn

    Not specified
  • Robert W. Service Selected Poetry and Prose

    Creator

    Service, Robert W.

    Gnarowski, Michael

    Abstract

    The writing of Robert W. Service is mostly known through his poems and ballads. Immortalized by his two iconic ballads, "The Cremation of Sam McGee" and "The Shooting of Dan McGrew," he has entered the world’s imagination as the Bard of the Yukon.

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    Dundurn

    Not specified
  • Pauline Johnson Selected Poetry and Prose

    Creator

    Johnson, Pauline

    Gnarowski, Michael

    Abstract

    Half-Mohawk, half-English author Pauline Johnson astounded Canada with her unique poetry, prose, and presentations. Pauline Johnson was an unusual and unique presence on the literary scene during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Part Mohawk and part European, she was a compelling female voice in the midst of an almost entirely male writing community. Having discovered her talent for public recitation of poetry, Johnson relied on her ancestry and gender to establish an international reputation for her stage performances, during which she appeared in European and native costume.

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    Dundurn

    Not specified
  • The Self-Completing Tree

    Creator

    Livesay, Dorothy

    Abstract

    The Self-Completing Tree is the author's own collection of the best of her last 50 years of writing. In this new edition, the celebrated Grand Dame of English Canadian letters and award-winning poet uses the metaphor implied by the title — a tree, half verdant, half in flames — to symbolize the androgynous self. This is the theme of much of Livesay's work and a central metaphor for the most definitive collection of her poetry. The result is a spiritual autobiography charting the fascinating domains of her own life and the universal struggles we all share.

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    Dundurn

    Not specified
  • In This Poem I Am Selected Poetry of Robin Skelton

    Creator

    Skelton, Robin

    Rhenisch, Harold

    Abstract

    In a country in which poetry has been largely private and apologetic, Robin Skelton played the part of poet with grand style: flowing beard, mane of white hair, rings on every finger, huge amulet around his neck, all topped off with a black hat that looked as if it came from a Venetian gondolier but was really picked up at the re-enactment of a Cariboo Gold Rush-era general store in Barkerville, B.C.

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    Dundurn

    Not specified
  • The Year Is a Circle A Celebration of Henry David Thoreau

    Creator

    Friesen, Victor Carl

    Abstract

    Henry David Thoreau is remembered as a foremost nature writer. He was an ecologist before the term was invented. A man of many parts, including social critic, he is known to have had an influence on such internationally recognized leaders as Gandhi and Martin Luther King. "Victor Carl Friesen, author of The Spirit of the Huckleberry, an astute analysis of Henry David Thoreau’s prose, again demonstrates his affinity for the Walden sage with this unique volume of poems and photographs.

    Publisher (Source)

    [S.l.]

    Dundurn

    Not specified
  • When September Comes And Other Poems

    Creator

    Jailall, Peter

    Abstract

    Peter Jailall continues his search for the place called home in his third volume of poetry, exploring the "open, dangerous" landscape of a post-September 11th world. In this climate of globalization, none are untouched by the threats of terrorism or the spoils of modernization and its effect on our environment. As poet, teacher and storyteller, Peter’s unique gift for the blending of language – from Caribbean-accented English to Hindi – allows him to paint beautiful dichotomies between the Guyana of his birth, and the Canada that is his current home.

    Publisher (Source)

    [S.l.]

    Dundurn

    Not specified
  • Weather Report

    Creator

    Batchelor, Rhonda

    Abstract

    Like the shifting and often turbulent skies of our own emotional meteorology, Rhonda Batchelor's poems forecast the shifting patterns of a marriage from quiet moments of a graceful dawn to stormy seas of absence, from brilliant love-strewn sunshowers to dark moments of loss and bitter nights upon the shore. In three sections, "Backbone of the Moon", "Ghostly Dialogues" and "Still Breathing", Batchelor explores the fleeting forever trilogy of expectations, unions and releases that comprise the tidelike phases of a lover's cycle.

    Publisher (Source)

    [S.l.]

    Dundurn

    Not specified
  • Helsinki Drift

    Creator

    Smith, Douglas Burnet

    Abstract

    Actress Mae West once said "I’ve been things and seen places." Poet Douglas Burnet Smith might well be able to lay claim to the same boast. In his latest collection of verse he takes the reader on a kaleidoscopic journey through Amsterdam’s antique streets and canals, Tuscany’s sun-soaked landscapes, Paris’s Gallic gabble of monuments and madcaps, and the title poem’s Finnish auditory and aural delights. In one poem we play Scrabble with Dadaist Tristan Tzara.

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    Dundurn

    Not specified