A legend of 19th century French Canadian poetry, Émile Nelligan was only
16 when he fell under the influence of Baudelaire and Rimbaud and began
writing taut, confidently surrealistic poems, shot through
self-lacerating melancholy. Translating Nelligan's "essential" poems,
along with a sharp introduction contextualizing his legacy as one of the
"first poets to write openly about suicide, neurosis, and psychological
breakdown," Marc di Saverio has given us a rivetingly fresh version of
Nelligan for a new generation.