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Alice Notley in ‘mercuryfirs’
“Our attention has always existed before we were it was like a lake of space…” (“The House Gone”, Alice Notley) The above is a quotation extracted from “The House Gone”—a poem found in Alice Notley’s forthcoming The Speak Angel Series (Fonograf Editions, February 2023). In the book’s introduction, she writes: “I offer a future made…
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[infinite grids]
A collaborative video poem based on Vancouver Poet Laureate Fiona Tinwei Lam’s poem “Utility Pole”. This poem can be found in Odes & Laments (Caitlin Press, 2019). “Utility Pole is a poetry film collaboration between poet Fiona Tinwei Lam and poetry filmmaker Mary McDonald. Utility Pole explores the transformation of trees into the poles that…
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[Peacock Blue]
For anyone interested in the work of the late, great Canadian poet Phyllis Webb, here is a podcast in which Stephen Collis discusses Webb’s work with Isabella Wang and Fred Wah. For a link to the Phyllis Webb SpokenWeb Podcast episode, click here. For audio content, literary recordings, poets reading their work, and more, find…
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[a lake is there]
When I’d go out exploring in the bush as a kid I’d often be looking as far ahead as I could, trying to see places where the outline of trees thinned against the sky. I knew this meant that there could be a lake or some sort of clearing there and I felt compelled to…
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[aversion to your “actual life”]
An excerpt: Rob Taylor interviews Steve Heighton for The Walrus. Link to the full interview here. RT: You talk about this aversion to your “actual life” in one of your earliest poems, “Sailing, Gulf Islands.” SH: I wrote “Sailing, Gulf Islands” in 1986, about events that supposedly took place around fifteen years earlier. But I’ve…
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[All these ships]
Joey Yearous-Algozin, author of A Feeling Called Heaven (Nightboat Books), interviewed at The Believer. JYA: “There’s that beautiful Williams poem I wish people knew better called “Asphodel, That Greeny Flower.” In that poem he has this argument about the ships of Troy—it’s a large catalog of ships, it’s super boring, in The Iliad. Williams’ argument…