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  • Published: 26 March 2019
  • ISBN: 9780771043116
  • Imprint: McClelland & Stewart
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 112
  • RRP: $32.99
Categories:

Magnetic Equator




Winner of the 2020 Griffin Poetry Prize • Finalist for the QWF A.M. Klein Prize for Poetry

An original, inventive--and visually stunning--exploration of place, identity, language, and experience from the acclaimed poet, novelist, and sound performer.

Winner of the 2020 Griffin Poetry Prize • Finalist for the QWF A.M. Klein Prize for Poetry

An original, inventive--and visually stunning--exploration of place, identity, language, and experience from the acclaimed poet, novelist, and sound performer.

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.

  • Published: 26 March 2019
  • ISBN: 9780771043116
  • Imprint: McClelland & Stewart
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 112
  • RRP: $32.99
Categories:

Praise for Magnetic Equator

Praise for Kaie Kellough:

  • "A black diasporic, jazzy-bluesy rumination on notions of place and identity in this 21st century. Whether commenting on encounters of racism in Calgary schoolyards or delivering brief lessons on the secret history of Canadian Blacks in B.C., Ontario, Quebec, and Nova Scotia, or ruminating on farther-flung locales like Harlem, New Orleans, and the U.K., Kellough's poems remain rooted in personal experience, with a voice that's sometimes acerbic, often ironic, occasionally angry, but always compassionate, a voice which carries a high level of commitment to the craft of the poet." --Rabble.ca

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