Book Review
Review: Walking Across The Day by d.n. simmers
Reviewed by Michael Edwards Walking Across The Day by d.n simmers, New Westminster, BC: Silver Bow Publishing, 2020. Vancouver poet d.n. simmers published his third collection of poems, Walking Across the Day, with Silver Bow in 2020. Entering into the book, the epigraph comes from the title poem, offering the lines, “Day is the omelette…
Read MoreStrange Ways: a review of The Hammer of Witches by Kelly Rose Pflug-Back
Reviewed by By Louise Carson The Hammer of Witches by Kelly Rose Pflug-Back, Dagger Editions, 2020 One of the things I liked about The Hammer of Witches was that it made me look stuff up. As in the title of the first poem – ‘Malleus Maleficarum’. MM is a treatise on witches, translation, The Hammer…
Read MoreFinal Breaths on the Tongue: Review of Gianna Patriarca’s To the Men Who Write Goodbye Letters
Reviewed by Renée M. Sgroi Gianna Patriarca’s latest poetry collection, To the Men Who Write Goodbye Letters (Inanna, 2020) balances the universal and the specific. Using feminist and multilingual lenses, Patriarca’s poems are, like the stones she has written about in a previous poetry collection, unapologetically hard-edged, honest, and as a result absolutely compelling. The…
Read MoreReview: The Dance Between: Poems About Women by Susan Ioannou
Review by Kate Marshall Flaherty first published in Verse Afire, January 2021. The Dance Between: Poems About Women by Susan Ioannou Opal Editions, pp. 72 paper ISBN 978-0-920835-54-8, 2019 eBook eISBN 978-0-920835-55-5, 2021 The Dance Between is a suite of spare and striking poems about women, in various stages of life’s rhythms. Susan Ioannou’s epigram…
Read MoreReview: For the Love of Lazaros by Susan Ioannou
Reviewed by Ronnie R. Brown first published in Verse Afire, January 2020. For the Love of Lazaros by Susan Ioannou Opal Editions, 54 pp. paper ISBN 978-0-920835-53-1, 2019 eBook eISBN 978-0-920835-57-9, 2021 Susan Ioannou is a name very familiar to readers of all aspects of Canadian Writing—children’s literature, fiction, non-fiction, reviewing and, of course, poetry.…
Read MoreReview: The Other Life by Pat Connors
Reviewed by Jeevan Bhagwat In his debut poetry collection, The Other Life (Mosaic Press, 2021), Patrick Conners takes us on an introspective journey that seeks to find meaning and purpose in the sometimes mundane aspects of everyday life. Following in the footsteps of such luminaries as Al Purdy and Milton Acorn, these poems unfold in…
Read MoreReview: A Near Memoir: New Poems by Penn Kemp
Reviewed by Katerina Fretwell A Near Memoir: New Poems, Penn Kemp’s elegant chapbook, features her father’s portrait of her at 14 on the cover. Photos and art invite the reader into family dynamics. Fitting for a memoir, Kemp’s poetry expands Heidegger’s perception that “nearness slows the future’s approach, creating room for a present to develop…
Read MoreReview of Niagara & Government, by Phil Hall
Reviewed by Marguerite Pigeon “I have compounded another thingamajig,” exclaims Phil Hall partway through his recent collection, Niagara & Government (Pedlar Press, 2020). The thingamajig in question is a scavenged toy compass that Hall has fit inside a bottle cap, to his great satisfaction. But it also stands in for Hall’s overall approach to writing:…
Read MoreMany Shadows, review of In the Shadow of Vimy: Poems, New and Selected, Stewart Donovan, The Nashwaak Press, 2021
Reviewed by Louise Carson We know right away after reading the first poem of In the Shadow of Vimy that the book is not going to be a paean to war. Despite its innocuous title – ‘Picking up Pies at St. John’s Anglican’ – the poem plunges the reader into the poet’s main theme: war…
Read MoreReview: Me, You, Then Snow by Khashayar Mohammadi
Reviewed by Kate Rogers The poems in Khashayar Mohammadi’s new poetry collection, Me, You, Then Snow, skillfully evoke the surreal nature of everyday life as the young narrator searches for self-understanding in our age of profound uncertainty. The poems explore the evolving self without self-centeredness. An epigraph from Khurdish-Iranian poet and actor Hossein Panahi sets…
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