Russell Thornton has the rare ability to be both keenly observant of the
minute details of his environment and intensely introspective. His
poetry is full of startling images that will stay with you long after
turning the final page.
In House Built of Rain, Thornton takes his readers on a dizzying
journey of human experience - from the yearning of a young child to the
sorrow of an adult losing a loved one to Alzheimer's. He covers a lot of
ground along the way, witnessing prostitutes counting out their smiles,
/ and hiding in their pupils or hiking to the mouth of the Capilano
River where the gulls know how the waters of this place can run two ways
at once.
Thornton writes about extremes: the moment of conception and the moment
of death, tranquil forests and smoky urban bars, abuse and tenderness.
Concerned but never pessimistic, fierce but compassionate, narrative but
lyrical, House Built of Rain is a balanced collection of work that
reveals Thornton's considerable talents as a wordsmith. Though his poems
are often dark and edgy, he shows us beauty in a scream, ecstasy in
violence and, in a dying breath, the universe