An original, inventive--and visually stunning--exploration of place,
identity, language, and experience from the acclaimed poet, novelist,
and sound performer.
GRIFFIN POETRY PRIZE WINNER
QWF A.M. KLEIN PRIZE FOR POETRY FINALIST
The poems in Kaie Kellough's third collection drift between South and
North America. They seek their ancestry in Georgetown, Guyana, in the
Amazon Rainforest, and in the Atlantic Ocean. They haunt the Canadian
Prairie. They recall the 1980s in the suburbs of Calgary, and they
reflect on the snowed-in, bricked-in boroughs of post-referendum
Montréal. They puzzle their language together from the natural world and
from the works of Caribbean and Canadian writers. They reassemble
passages about seed catalogues, about origins, about finding a way in
the world, about black ships sailing across to land. They struggle to
explain a state of being hemisphered, of being present here while
carrying a heartbeat from elsewhere, and they map the distances
travelled.