a keeper of things forgotten, a vase / for pictures made by words, a
riverbed / for the stories you tell, an earthen silhouette / of a
childWith vivid imagery and endless compassion for her subjects, Tanya
Standish McIntyre's words breathe life. Her richly lyrical phrases
capture both the fear and the beauty of growing up in a rural
working-class community, anchored by the magical bond between a young
girl and her grandfather. Way's Mills, Quebec, is the setting for these
poems, although as with Mark Twain's Mississippi, physical place becomes
a place in the heart in this elegy for lost ancestral farms. Standish
McIntyre gives voice to the unspoken, shining a light into the dark
corners of our collective memory to reveal an indelible past that gleams
with clarity, empathy, and humanity. Taking seed in the dilapidated
barns and warm sunlit rooms of Standish McIntyre's personal history,
these poems weave a filigree of well-worn remembrances and time-honoured
treaties of the self, half forgotten yet ever lingering. Lucid, sharp,
and crisp as spring water, this collection holds a sweeping narrative
power that will stay with you long after the last line.