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Month: April 2021

What is Linda Light Reading?

I just finished reading Brian Doyle’s One Long River of Song, a book of exquisite essays with the appropriate sub-title of Notes on Wonder. One of the lovely things about this book is how Brian Doyle finds wonder in the most ordinary of things: his twin sons eating dirt, sturgeons, fighting with his brothers, the trial of William Blake, and even his own impending (and untimely) death. 

Some of his words particularly linger in my mind: his encounter with the shrew, in which the tiny creature was “awfully near my two absolute favorite eyeballs”; a bricked up heart felled by “a child’s apple breath”; his small magical moment crouched in a hedge with his brothers, reminding the reader that “You were there too, remember, in your childhood cave”; and his Last Prayer, in which he addresses his God with “Thanks. Best life ever.” 

I thought the fact that he is a deeply religious man – Catholic – might get in the way of my enjoyment of his essays – I am neither Catholic nor deeply religious – but it didn’t at all. However, I have to admit the image of his wife actually kneeling by her bed to pray startled me – and shattered a few stereotypes that I acknowledge I held about deeply religious Catholics and about progressive thinkers. 

I first came across Brian Doyle through his essay Joyas Voladoras, which was reprinted in The Sun magazine. I was so taken with it that I sent the link to various family members and friends – and later discovered that this collection of his essays, also containing Joyas Voladoras, had been posthumously gathered for publication by his friends. 

Not only are these essays funny, enlightening, and moving – they are instructional from a writing point of view. As an essayist myself, I found both the subject matter and his widely varying writing styles filled me with ideas. 

Reading his essays in bed before I went to sleep felt like I was having a visit with a friend just before I turned the light of my day off. I read the essays in random order and when I was done, I searched through the book a couple more times hoping that there was one more that I had missed!

Linda Light writes about a wide range of topics, from the joy of family recipe books to homelessness. She lives in Vancouver close to her daughters and grandchildren.

Photo courtesy of Glenn Theunissen

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Finding the Form with Phoebe Wang

I am intimidated by the idea of a novel so I made myself believe that short stories would be easier. Short stories also fit my intention, which was to tell the stories of my community– the other mothers my mother met at the Chinese Community centre, neighbours, friends of our uncles and aunties, related through marriage, and my small, close friendships in University with the studious girls whose parents had emigrated from Singapore, Hong Kong, and Shanghai.

A thread of loss ran through all of the stories and experienced I witnessed. Heart attacks, football accidents, infidelity, denials, even a violent murder. I began to see a pattern in parents whose expectations and strict observation of professional and academic success, whose long working hours and absences from home would affect their children’s wellbeing and even drastically, their survival. These were stories I felt needed to be told, and had been told by others, but that I wanted to flesh out with additional implications.

For instance, a collection that had affected me as a student was Madeleine Thien’s Simple Recipes. In the final story, a father’s physical violence drives his young son into himself. I wanted to imagine what might happen to that son, and his sister, when they grew older. In Doretta Lau’s How Does a Single Blade of Grass Thank the Sun?, I read of diasporic and immigrant twenty-somethings navigating Vancouver and other urban centres, weighted by ghosts and an inability to connect with others. How would these subjects act as parents, and reconcile their own emotionally distant childhoods and adolescents? Souvankham Thammavongsa’s How to Pronounce Knife spotlighted the hopes and dreams of South Asian factory and salon workers and their comforts amid poverty and relocation. While my parents had also received social assistance, my stories and experiences were more about a tentative hold on middle-class, the accumulations of wealth and property that came from pushing children into professions such as law and medicine, and the racism and discrimination these Chinese Canadian families continued to encounter even as they rose in social status.

The idea came to me to show three siblings as they traversed the decades, each of them living in a different apartment or house. This form would underscore the temporality and impermanence of new immigrants still financially solvent, and the lack of stability that results from not having a sense of rootedness in a place. 

I set the first story in the family home, when the main character and middle child, Alexa, is still in high school. This story would contain the inciting incident that would further separate all of the family members. The father’s many emotional and physically ailments would reverberate through the years, affecting his children’s ability to form lasting relationships and find a sense of belonging. I outlined years and dates, drew family trees, aligned birthdates with Chinese horoscopes, even asked my mom to give my characters Chinese names. 

It had been nearly twenty years since I wrote fiction. Having focused on poetry, I needed to relearn how to plot fiction, write dialogue and create characters. Fortunately, I had attended the literary program at Canterbury Arts High School in Ottawa, where we pumped out several short stories a year, taking a mechanical, formulaic approach. The key pieces of advice I remembered from our talented teachers was to alternate between action, dialogue and exposition and to contain the story in as short a time period as possible.

As a poet, I’m comfortable with containers and strictures. I chose to fit the events of “Escape Route” in a single day. Taking the bus to school, going to class, eating lunch with her best friend, going through the motions at work, Alexa’s day rolled in front of my eyes like a short film. I had the sensation of observing the action from the sidelines like a videographer. It was eerie and fun. As a poet, a good day is perhaps a stanza or an incoherent draft, so that for decades I have associated writing with unending guilt. With fiction, 500 to 1000 words rolled out by dinner and I could get up from my desk with a clean sense of having been emptied out. When I got stuck, I went on a walk, took a shower, cooked a meal, and by the next day, another scene had played itself in my mind. I was learning to listen to Alexa and her thoughts, getting to know her as well as learning to tell her story. And I learned again to be grateful for the stories that had been passed onto me to tell.

Phoebe Wang is a writer and educator based in Toronto and a first-generation Chinese-Canadian. Her debut collection of poetry, Admission Requirements (McClelland and Stewart, 2017) was nominated for the Trillium Book Award. Her second collection of poetry, Waking Occupations, is due in Spring 2022. She works as a Writing and Learning Consultant for ELL students at OCAD University. More of her work can be found at www.alittleprint.com. 

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Header photo courtesy of Jess Bailey 

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Finding the Form with Susan Olding

In the winter of 2020, just before the pandemic hit, I was editing my most recent book, Big Reader. To keep the more creative part of myself engaged, I enrolled in Nicole Breit’s Visual Essay course. It’s an ungraded online six-week program that encourages participants to experiment with diptychs, triptychs, photo essays, graphic work, and other visual forms. (My photo essay, “Pacific Spirit,” also grew out of an invitation in that course.)

I was familiar with some of these forms and with some of the suggested reading material before I joined the class, but taking the course gave me permission to play. “Choose Your Seat Now” was my attempt at what Nicole calls a “decentred hermit crab essay” — it can be read in any direction, and the visual element does not simply illustrate the story but is in some way integral to it. 

I don’t know why or how I hit on the image of the interior of a plane and a life story told through seat numbers. Maybe because I was about to travel to Ontario for research? (I went, returning to BC just as COVID restrictions came into effect). 

By the time I had revised the piece and sent it to the editors at TNQ for consideration, the mere idea of plane travel evoked a powerful sense of nostalgia. The cramped seats and crowded rows we loved to complain about and the distant places we journeyed in them now seemed, like handshakes and hugs, almost unimaginable— and unimaginably precious. 

If the pandemic truly initiates a shift in our reliance on air travel, the planet will thank us. Yet air travel has shaped my life. I feel suspended between the feelings of then and now. I hope essay embodies that sense of suspension.   

Susan Olding is the author of Big Reader: Essays, and Pathologies: A Life in Essays. A long-time contributor to TNQ, She lives and writes in the traditional territories of the Lekwungen and W̱SÁNEĆ nations, in Victoria, British Columbia. Find her at www.susanolding.com or https://www.instagram.com/susan.olding/

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Header photo courtesy of Chun

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What is Alison Braid Reading?

The bus ride to work is when I get stuck into an essay from Bringing the Devil to His Knees, edited by Peter Turchi and Charles Baxter. Off the bus, I continue reading as I walk the two blocks to work, slowly coming back to the day, looking away from the page to cross the road and step off the curb. The essays are imaginative and inspired; each one asking me to reconsider an element of a story I’m in the midst of writing or revising. Perhaps the essay that has haunted me most is “Where’s Iago,” by Susan Neville. In it, she recounts a phone call from Kurt Vonnegut, who told her the novel she was writing was “missing Iago.” Neville talks about Iago and the image of evil, and how various types of evil function as tools and structures in storytelling.

At work when the bookstore is quiet, I read new picture books coming in on the cart—a favourite this month has been Milo Imagines the World by Matt de la Peña and Christian Robinson. The artwork is stunning. And how can you not fall in love with the language when there are lines like: “the dog peeking out of her handbag has no face at all, / just a long, lolling tongue.”

Then there’s Killing and Dying by cartoonist Adrian Tomine. The style, with its clean lines and pastel palette, conveys big emotions in small moments. Tomine’s panels remind me of how we seem to be experiencing the passage time now in the midst of a pandemic, where it is at once terribly swift and excruciatingly slow. Already, another day turns over. Looking ahead, Dantiel W. Moniz’s Milk Blood Heat is on the top of the stack.

Alison Braid is the author of the chapbook Little Hunches (Anstruther Press, Spring 2020.) Her work is published or forthcoming in Arc Poetry Magazine, Bad Nudes, The Puritan, Prairie Fire, CV2, and elsewhere. She is currently pursuing an MFA at the Vermont College of Fine Arts.

Cover photo courtesy of Ant Rozetsky

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Poetry Review: Poisonous if Eaten Raw

Ever since my mother died almost two years ago, memories of her surface into consciousness at all times of the day, evoked by events and objects both trivial and significant. I suspect that the same process was at work as the motivation and impetus for most of the poems in Alyda Faber’s third collection, Poisonous If Eaten Raw (Icehouse Poetry, an imprint of Goose Lane Publishing), most of which offer portraits of her mother as, on , or on a variety of objects, people, or activities, subjects as lofty as a Frank Carmichael painting or as lowly as a pair of hot-water bottles.

Each of the portrait poems challenges us to find the likeness between two vastly different things, much like the analogies used in IQ testing or those at the heart of famous riddles, such as the well-known tea-party one posed by Lewis Carroll: “Why is a raven like a writing desk?” (The fact that it wasn’t meant to have an answer never stopped readers from trying to devise one, as in “ because they both produce notes that are flat”).

But analogies have a more significant function in the way they explain the unfamiliar with reference to the familiar, what is hard to understand with what might be easier to grasp (and sometimes parent-child relationships can be very complex indeed). They initiate a learning process for those who read them and those who create them. So what we understand about the mother in these poems is integral to the poet’s understanding of a mother she may not have fully understood.

To wander even more recklessly into the realm of speculation, I would say that the reason for reimagining (revisioning?) her mother in this way can be found in the book’s title, Poisonous If Eaten Raw (taken from the poem Marsh Marigolds). Examining this relationship metaphorically may be less toxic psychologically than a tell-all confessional poetic memoir. So in response to the question asked in Portrait of My Mother As Abstraction–what shape does the mother-daughter passion  assume after the death of the mother?—I would say that it takes the shape of these poems.

Biographical details about the mother (never referred to as my mother except in the titles) are not plentiful but can be gleaned as the poems proceed. Born in the province of Friesland in the Netherlands, she lived in a town with Medieval origins, married to a man (called “friend-enemy” in one poem) at the end of WWII, and immigrated to Canada, returning, it seems, only twice for visits of short-lived freedom from marital and maternal obligations. Details of family are also relatively scarce, but we can be certain that the marriage was not a pleasant one, quite the opposite in fact, as we see in Portrait of My Mother As a Cow Being Beaten, where the wife becomes little more than livestock, and in references to the mother in other poems as a sheep and the husband a wolf. In one of the book’s most chilling poems, Sheep, Again-Wolf, we find the mother recognizing that the Lord may lead his flock “to green pastures and cool waters” but also that, if you “walk up a ramp [and] turn a corner, you may find yourself on the slaughterhouse floor.”

About her other children, we also learn very little, but we do read about her eldest son in Portrait of My Mother As Dead=Weight Lift, the one  “who claims her heart” yet, perhaps inheriting his father’s capricious temper, who once lifted her off her feet, holding her only by the head, as “his thumbs press into her cervical spine’ [and} ‘”his fingers flex the lower jawbone/ and her carotid  arteries pulse against his palms,” eventually lowering her so that “the twitch of toes taps down, and then the clap of heels.” In regard to the central relationship between mother and daughter, we must largely move across the distance of metaphor, but we do get more direct references as in Portrait of My Mother as a Black-Capped Chickadee: “mother daughter not enough for each other/but might have been had we looked at each other more.”

The relationship, as we learn in Rough Measure, is “Rarely eye-to-eye, at her best, shoulder to shoulder.” We also sense an empathy if not a tenderness for her mother, who seems to have found refuge in religion and parental severity or discipline, as we see in another portrait, where her mother appeals, in both tumult and peace, to “God the host in her pyramid of prayer. In Portrait of My Mother’s Fox Scream, the poet explains, “Every time I hear it/every part of me stands up, wanting to answer but/I’ve already been taught to sit still until she turns away.” Perhaps the most direct explanation of their fraught relationship comes in Portrait: Hidden, in which the estrangement of mother and daughter becomes clear through the different entries in childhood diary and adult journal, the former recording her mother’s activities on their visit to her homeland and the latter not acknowledging her existence at all. The two “went on like this, stiff and then stiffer/not saying much well talking so much/and staying so hidden.” 

One of the most edifying aspects of these poems is that many of them are ekphrastic, offering commentary on famous paintings, photographs, and sculptures. We are once again challenged to make the connection between the artwork so deftly described and the mother so indirectly implied. One notable is Portrait of My Mother as Pope Innocent X—which refers to Diego Velazquez’s famous papal portrait, in which the mother, as  “Her Reverence”, offers no absolution “for the daughter’s rages against the father.” At the end of the poem there is an even more telling allusion, this one to Francis Bacon’s famous Screaming Popes portrait series. In describing the mother, the poet tells us that it is “Impossible to unearth/into paint her interred scream–Francis Bacon tried, tried over forty times.” (There is also a deliberate irony in this reference as it parallels the poet’s own efforts to “paint” the anguish of her mother.)

Equally compelling is Portrait of My Mother As Diane Arbus Photographing a Boy in Central Park. Faber’s description of the image is exact: “Ventriloquist dummy face chews words/but his mechano-hands striate with rage; the toy grenade/a lesson for the tomorrows his parents won’t see.” The parallel to the mother is not clear her but perhaps lies in the last two lines, which refer to Arbus’s bathtub suicide eleven years after this photograph was taken: “she’ll marry her rage for ferrous water but for now/ she cradles the camera in her hands and detonates him.” One of the ekphrastic poems that deal with sculpture, Portrait of My Mother as Boxer at Rest, figuratively compares the bronze figure to the abused mother, whose head was always the main target/in these ancient conflicts but who in a fight would “never expose/her jaw like this—turning her head to the right.”

Just as many portraits in this collection are not related to works of art. Some of most memorable (and perhaps surprising) are the three devoted respectively to Alex Lifeson, Geddy Lee, and Neil Peart, the members of  Canada’s legendary rock band, Rush. The list of analogous subjects is, in fact, quite diverse, animate and inanimate, ranging from architecture to zoology, but in closing I will focus on the two poems that open and close the book, both of which focus on insects: Portrait of My Mother As a Funnel Spider and Portrait of My Mother As a Moth on a Kitchen Window. The first details the web-making and molting habits of a spider, a connection to the mother perhaps being established in the lines “she bites between knuckle ridges and on the tender inner/wrist. The livid bumps linger for days.” Later we read that  “A snare of filaments on the web floor/will snag the smallest spurs on insect limbs, the least iota of guilt, bad girl.” I wonder as well whether the growth transformation of the molting spider metaphorically parallels the mother’s defence strategy or perhaps the manifold ways in which her mother takes new form throughout the poems.

In the final poem, a moth clings tenaciously to the window glass during a violent storm, only to rise when it blows over:

Against the rain-dark bark

Of the maple, she’s almost spectral

As she floats up and out through holes in the net of limbs.

The words “spectral” and “limbs” are significant, suggesting an escape from the world of the flesh, a welcome ascent from earthly life.

Several poems in this collection, some of the most accomplished in fact, are not based on portraits. However, what unites them all is the poet’s meticulous attention to words.. Her language is precise and concise, both apt and original–“admirably idiosyncratic,” to quote the book’s cover blurb—two qualities that are not easily combined. A few random examples of images that appeal to both sound and sight: ”broom-swish sound of the trees,” “bird chitter [that] snows down from iron girders,”the scissors [that] jaw across the cloth-covered kitchen table/with bullfrog croaks’” and “her [a wren’s] chiding a tumble dryer’s clatter of zippers, snaps, and huff of turning clothes.” 

Not long after my mother’s memorial service, a colleague who had heard me mention her death asked, “What was she like?” The question was overwhelming given the memories and emotions it brought on. But I was also struck for the first time by the form the question took, the built-in, barely recognized simile, a question we ask about new experiences and difficult-to- describe emotions. If I had read this book at the time, I might have answered with another of Faber’s lines (one that was apparently the original title of this collection): She was “like the rain, in all the ways that it falls.” 

Header photo courtesy of Andrew Neel 

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Book Review: The Whole Singing Ocean

In Jessica Moore’s book-length poem, The Whole Singing Ocean, an oceanic pull – called Story – insists that the author go on a voyage. She sets out to discover what the musical vastness of language, the sea of memory, and the oceans of our globe hold in their mingled depths. She encounters monstrous islands of plastic refuse, the all-seeing, giant eye of a whale, naked boys on a boat captained by a sexual predator with lofty ideals, luminous algae, the slippery thinking of Michel Foucault, and a dark tale of childhood trauma passed from mother to daughter. 

A story can have many beginnings. At the start of Moore’s is her life-long hunger to see a whale; early in the book she lies in the arms of a young boat builder, in the hull of his boat, and receives a story. He tells her about the time he swam up to the eye of a whale.

“You have never seen an eye such as this, so large
asking nothing—

and then there you are
just you and the whale

with her you are the vast mirroring sea. You are
the whole singing ocean. You are beheld
held in that eye and you

are whole.”    

The author falls for the man’s story, not him. She leaves him and carries his story for years, crossing continents, searching for relief from a great and early grief.

“and for twenty years I see I’ve been searching for something 
in the arms of men
when I should have been looking over their shoulder 
to the places we were in.”

Eight years pass before the author encounters the boat builder again. He now knows more of his own story than he did before. In his youth he spent over a year at the “école en bateau,” an alternative school on board a sailing ship, which gave him a taste of unbelievable adventure, and up until recently had been enshrined in his memory as perfection. But the trial and conviction of its founder reveal that the boat school carried much ugliness in its hold. Léonide Kameneff, the ship’s Foucault-inspired captain, was found guilty in 2013 of rape and other acts of sexual predation. 

At this juncture, the author longs to “push the story away.” She explains: “I gave myself three days—no more—to follow the sharp turn. Three days for the story to show me that it needed to be followed.”

Story and author negotiate their shared future:

“I:  What about you? What do you want?

Story:  I already said I’m like the sea. And the sea is only ever always endlessly being and being and being and all your strength is nothing against it, as you’ve well learned.

     I: Can you keep a secret?

Story: All of them. I can keep them all.”

Story tugs the author into the labyrinth of Foucault’s thinking on childhood sexuality, his love of transgression, and his determination to free children by breaking down all barriers between them and adults. Story pulls her into a small room in which her mother, in childhood, was abused by a neighbour, a room long ago translated into story, received by the author when young, and carried in her body. 

Moore’s book is an invitation to locate the oceanic within ourselves, the inner immensity required if we are to hold the beautiful and the monstrous side by side, if we are to embrace both rapture and loss. Is wholeness possible for humans? she asks. So often the psyche splits, seeking to cut off the unbearably painful and terrifying. A victim of abuse, testifying at a trial, speaks of a wall of glass that excludes him from the living, a researcher named H, whose subject is plastic pollution in the oceans, speaks of the mental split that allows her to live a consumerist life of luxury in an “aching world.” Story, Moore trusts, may lead her towards wholeness, by entwining in its fluidity the beautiful and the ugly, revealing their inseparability – without failing, nonetheless, to distinguish between good and bad.

It is the music of language that bears the author on her weaving voyage, allowing her to travel in and out of darkness, past dead seabirds who’ve swallowed tampon applicators, through whale song, through the stormy, luminous blur of Turner’s paintings, to a place of renewed possibility in herself and what may lie beyond all the binaries we create as human beings. 

The rhythms of Moore’s poetry, the quiet humour of her dexterous mind, and her brave questioning quickly won my trust. The Whole Singing Ocean is a gorgeous music and an act of daring listening to what we know but don’t want to know. It left me with a feeling of rare freedom.  

Martha Baillie’s novels include The Incident Report (long-listed for the Scotiabank Giller Prize), and The Search for Heinrich Schlögel (an Oprah editors’ pick). Her book Sister Language, co-written with her late sister, Christina Baillie, was a 2020 Trillium Award finalist. Martha’s non-fiction can be found in Brick: A Literary Journal. Her poetry has appeared in the Iowa review. Martha lives in Toronto. Her multimedia project based on The Search for Heinrich Schlögel is archived at www.sch

Header photo courtesy of Anastasia Taioglou 

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Finding the Form with Kevin Irie

A poem is another home for words, one of varying size but where the consideration of weight must be applied stringently, not just in order to avoid collapse, but to provide shelter to thoughts we want to survive. To build more with less without anything missing.

When I wrote the poem Windblown, it was originally in couplets, with enjambment leading from one stanza to another, following the lead of many of the poems in the collection it came from, The Tantramar Re-vision. I had found the combination of those two techniques to be suddenly liberating to my own writing and so I followed them, successively and productively.

When it came to Windblown though, the poem looked fine when done but did not feel completed. Literary techniques give the writer a chance to focus ahead without worrying about distractions along the periphery, the way a highway channels a driver straight to a chosen destination, speeding past a perhaps more interesting sideroad. 

But looking back, it was obvious that the words needed to float and be carried over the page the way seeds and sound are scattered in wind, except this time you could see what you could not hear of sound, or seeds.

            Wind carries sounds
it cannot hear 

                         the way it carries 

                   seeds 

that will not 

feed it, 

the way it moves further than most

     in a life that never 

                found 

a home.

Consequently, I let the words flutter down to settle at the bottom of the page, reflecting how the wind dies down and how the world settles itself at the end. The final words, a home, are down there, alone, reflecting the state of isolation or loss or longing, or whatever the reader wants words to be. 

As Chaucer knew, poems go out into the world. For a writer, poems are our words that speak well without us, and just as wind lands by ceasing to be what it was, a poem ends when you feel there is nowhere else to go.  

Kevin Irie is a Japanese-Canadian poet from Toronto whose book, Viewing Tom Thomson, A Minority Report (Frontenac House 2012) was a finalist for the Acorn-Plantos People’s Poetry Award and the Toronto Book Award. His new book is The Tantramar Re-Vision from McGill-Queen’s University Press, July 2021. 

Photos courtesy of Kevin Irie.

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