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Thirty-first Issue
Volume 13, No. 2
 

...letters

Re: Review Of the Riot That Never Was

Re: Review Of the Riot That Never Was, Response To James Jackson



features

Global Warring
By Michael Carbert

The Sentimentalists
By Claire Holden Rothman


fiction

Market Day
Reviewed by Lori Callaghan

Objects Of Worship
Reviewed by Vanessa Bonneau

The Jihadist
Reviewed by Correy Baldwin

Unwanted Hopeless Romantic Morons
Reviewed by Correy Baldwin

Wednesday Night At The End Of The World
Reviewed by Michael Varga


fiction at a glance

Josephine The Singer Or The Nation Of The Mice
Reviewed by Vanessa Bonneau


non-fiction

Afghanistan And Canada
Reviewed by Franc Gagnon

Encounters On The Passage: Inuit Meet The Explorers
Reviewed by Raquel Rivera

Growing With Canada: The Émigré Tradition In Canadian Music
Reviewed by Brian McMillan

Italy Revisited: Conversations With My Mother
Reviewed by Gina Roitman

Montreal Confidential
Reviewed by Dimitri Nasrallah

My Beloved Wager
Reviewed by Anna Leventhal

Selling Out
Reviewed by Eric Boodman

The Empire Within: Postcolonial Thought And Political Activism In Sixties Montreal
Reviewed by Eric Shragge

The Riot That Never Was: The Military Shooting Of Three Montrealers In 1832 And The Official Cover-up
Reviewed by Kate Forrest

Wild Geese: Buddhism In Canada
Reviewed by Sarah Fletcher


non-fiction at a glance

Every Goodbye Ain`t Gone: A Photo Narrative Of Black Heritage On Salt Spring Island
Reviewed by Mélanie Grondin

Paths Of Opportunity
Reviewed by Aparna Sanyal



poetry

Bhagavad Goalie
Reviewed by Ian McGillis

Blue Poppy
Reviewed by Dr. Bert Almon

Cast From Bells
Reviewed by Dr. Bert Almon

Pause For Breath
Reviewed by Dr. Bert Almon

Taproot Iv: Poetry, Prose And Images From The Eastern Townships
Reviewed by Mélanie Grondin

The Certainty Dream
Reviewed by Dr. Bert Almon

The Crow's Vow
Reviewed by Dr. Bert Almon



young readers

Camp Fossil Eyes
Reviewed by Andrea Belcham

Chester`s Masterpiece
Reviewed by Andrea Belcham

Here Comes The Bride
Reviewed by Andrea Belcham

Human Nature
Reviewed by Andrea Belcham

Somewhere In Blue
Reviewed by Andrea Belcham

The Archeolojesters
Reviewed by Andrea Belcham

Topsy-turvy Town
Reviewed by Andrea Belcham

When Stella Was Very, Very Small
Reviewed by Andrea Belcham




The Crow's Vow
Susan Briscoe
$16.00
paper 86 pp.
Signal Editions ISBN 978-1550652871
poetry

The Crow's Vow

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New Document New Document Susan Briscoe's The Crow's Vow is another work dealing with a dysfunctional union. Her poems in this sequence are dignified and reticent, so reticent that the terms of estrangement are never made very clear. When one of the poems provides a few outer details - there appears to be a blended family with children, a wife who writes essays, and a man who has clients - the reader seizes them eagerly, hoping to discover a context. The gulf between the man and woman is shown by their differing responses to nature and gardening - they seem to live in the country - and by the widening gulf in the bed. The wife longs for an arm around her waist, if only to shrug it off.

The sequence of the poems follows the seasons, but it is not clear if the pattern covers a single year, and this tough-minded poet would not think of ending the sequence with spring. The man (who is presented very sketchily) repeatedly speaks of love, but the woman doesn't believe him and dismisses his love as "skimmed milk virtue." The reader starts to long for the couple to seek counselling or break into open conflict instead of passive-aggressive manoeuvres: Briscoe knows how to build tension. The presence of the crows throughout the book creates an ominous atmosphere, especially as they have much in common with the humans. Like Kate Hall's mynahs, they argue, they build a home, and like the characters in the poem, they don't sing. Perhaps they have marriage vows of a sort, as the title of the book hints.

At the end, after a separation, the wife does appear to admit the husband to her consciousness, to take him seriously, as a man wanting to be seen. Our last glimpse of them finds them in bed, though they appear to have come to the house, single file, through heavy snow - the kind of simple but subtle detail that Briscoe excels at. She is a brilliant writer whose brilliance manifests itself in small strokes, images of "kisses like slim dimes," sharp-eyed observations ("the snow melts first / at the base of things") and sudden shifts of tone. Her reference to Erik Satie in one poem points to an aesthetic of minimalism, of small utterances that imply more than they say: an honourable approach to poetry.

Bert Almon’s new book, Waiting for the Gulf Stream, is due from Hagios Press in the autumn of 2010.



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