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Post-glacial is a collection of poems by Robert Kroetsch selected
by his former student David Eso. The book features Kroetsch's
iconic collection, Completed Field Notes, alongside rare work
gathered from different stages of Kroetsch's career. The book
contains an afterword by Aritha van Herk.Kroetsch's poetry evolved
from short lyric poetry in the 1960s to postmodern long poems in
the 1970s and 80s. Kroetsch's work in the 1990s and 2000s was
marked by the production of experimental chapbooks. Yet it is in
the 2000s that Kroetsch's celebrated The Hornbooks of Rita K and
his final collection, Too Bad, were published. Post-glacial
presents the material in a thematic arc that follows daily,
seasonal, and biographical topics. The collection moves from moods
of morning, spring, and youth to shades of darkness, winter, and
mourning. In the introduction, Eso charts Kroetsch's early attempts
at poetry in his teenage and undergraduate years. Eso takes the
title Post-glacial from the poem ""Lonesome Writer Diptych"" and
proposes the term as an alternative to ""postmodernism,"" a term
often used by critics to describe Kroetsch's work. Post-glacial
emphasizes the poet's interest in landscape, ecology, history, the
presence of absence, and the endurance of a living past.
It's a matter of knowing winter. Snowbird travels south, seeks
warmth, and begins waiting. Robert Kroetsch's new collection, The
Snowbird Poems, is a brilliant flight of departure. Beached where
he watches a drowning horizon, teased by romance, Snowbird lets his
responses become a message in a bottle to the lost and for the
found. Appearing at first wearing bifocals and drinking from a fake
coconut, Snowbird goes on to retrieve the footprint of story from
the ocean of memory.
The Hornbooks of Rita K, Robert Kroetsch's first volume of new
poetry in more than a decade, is a brilliant collection of
mysterious fragments. Where has Rita gone and who is reconstructing
her oeuvre? Written with wit and playfulness, Hornbooks is a
welcome new work from one of Canada's best writers.
I was electioneering. By God, people were listening. People were
looking my way. And some joker with his arse beginning to ache from
sitting too long on a nail had to clear his throat and chip in,
"Backstrom, what have you got to offer?" I looked at the speaker
and saw he was a farmer and I said, "Mister, how would you like
some rain?" A new edition of another classic from one of Canada's
most enduring novelists.
Hazard Lepage, the last of the studhorse men, sets out to breed his
rare blue stallion, Poseidon. A lusty trickster and a wayward
knight, Hazard's outrageous adventures are narrated by Demeter
Proudfoot, his secret rival, who writes this story while sitting
naked in an empty bathtub. In his quest to save his stallion's
bloodline from extinction, Hazard leaves a trail of anarchy and
confusion. Everything he touches erupts into chaos necessitating
frequent convalescences in the arms of a few good women-excepting
those of Martha, his long-suffering intended. Told with the ribald
zeal of a Prairie beer parlor tall tale and the mythic magnitude of
a Greek odyssey, The Studhorse Man is Robert Kroetsch's celebration
of unbridled character set against the backdrop of a
rough-and-ready Alberta emerging after the war. Winner of the
Governor General's Award for Fiction.
This book brings together twenty of Kroetsch's long poems, spanning
some of 15 years of creative activity. Remarkably versatile in both
form and content, these extended meditations bear witness to
Kroetsch's modernist inheritance and his well-known commitment to
post-modern jouissance. Whether it be in an evocation of an
Australian beach or in an account of the stone hammer used by the
poet's father, we find again and again the delight, elusiveness and
mastery of everyday language that have become trademarks of the
author's oeuvre.
A prodigious body of innovative writing behind him, Robert Kroetsch
turns to a starker lyrical mode in Too Bad: Sketches Toward a
Self-Portrait. Oscillating between the many moods of a human heart
that has lived through so much--from whimsy and scorn through
desire, longing, lust, love, and serenity--these sketches mark a
candid walk through the tortuous corridors of the poet's
remembering, and exemplify the rehearsed dictum of an old teacher:
"Every enduring poem was written today." Simply put, "This book is
not an autobiography. It is a gesture toward a self-portrait, which
I take to be quite a different kettle of fish." -- Robert Kroetsch,
from the Introduction
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