Paperback / softback
ISBN:
9781772012507
Pages: 96
Pub. Date:
March 1 2020
Dimensions: 9" x 6" x 0.3125"
Rights: Available: WORLD
Categories
Poetry / POE021000
A lyrical collection focussing on a specific street and on a particular tree growing there, Earle Street, by Governor General’s Award winner Arleen Paré, takes the concept of street and urban living, the houses on the street, the neighbours, the boulevard trees and wildlife, and the street’s history as a poetic focal point. The book is divided into four sections, each of which differently considers the poet’s home street – as a river, as an arboretum, as a window, and finally as a whole world – resulting in an extended meditation on place, community, and lesbian domesticity that is at once poetic and philosophical. "Start from the inside," Paré writes, "as though organic, as though building from inside a seed." Here is the macrocosm reflected, examined, and refracted through the microcosm of a single, quiet neighbourhood street.
“Paré disrupts the fixity inherent in ideas of normativity by underscoring the very liminality that exists at the core of language.”
—Clayton Longstaff, the League of Canadian Poets
“Arleen has written poems about trees, rats, a grey squirrel, an orange cat, the people, the naming of the street, memories of her own ancestors, and of her own past. All of these aspects, including the various forms used, make it a rich and intimate exploration of place as well as with oneself.”
—maryannmoore.ca
“Read this book and prepare to see where you live anew.”
—The Maynard
“a cool and soothing collection”
—Times Colonist
“Paré disrupts the fixity inherent in ideas of normativity by underscoring the very liminality that exists at the core of language”
—Clayton Longstaff, League of Canadian Poets
“In her choice of details … Paré articulates beautiful private moments, as well as doubts and the sense of isolation that sometimes colour urban life. And that’s the thing about this collection. Though the focus is Earle Street, the poems are both reflective and collective. In Earle Street: Poems, Paré gives us a revelatory way to look at our own relationship to place.” – Prairie Fire