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Poetry Canadian

Feeling the Worlds

by (author) Dorothy Livesay

Publisher
Goose Lane Editions
Initial publish date
Jan 1984
Category
Canadian
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9780864920454
    Publish Date
    Jan 1984
    List Price
    $7.95

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Where to buy it

Out of print

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Description

An impressive collection published for Dorothy Livesay's seventy-fifth birthday. Her career spans the decades from the 1930s to the present day, during which time she has written political and social protest, confessional and love poetry, while from the beginning her work has shown a commitment to honest observation and statement.

About the author

Dorothy Livesay’s first book was published in 1928, Green Pitcher (Macmillan), followed by: Signpost (Macmillan, 1932), Day and Night (Ryerson, 1944), Poems for People (Ryerson, 1947), Call My People Home (Ryerson, 1950), New Poems (Emblem, 1955) Selected Poems (Ryerson, 1957), The Unquiet Bed (Ryerson, 1967), The Documentaries (Ryerson, 1968), Plainsongs (Fiddlehead, 1969), Disasters of the Sun (Blackfish, 1971), Collected Poems: The Two Seasons (McGraw-Hill, 1972), Nine Poems of Farewell (Black Moss, 1973), Winnipeg Childhood (Pequis Press, 1973), The Raw Edges (Turnstone, 1981), The Phases of Love (Coach House, 1983) and Feeling the Worlds (Goose Lane/Fiddlehead, 1984). With Beach Holme she has published Ice Age (1975), The Woman I Am (1977), Right Hand, Left Hand (1977) and The Self-Completing Tree (Beach Holme, 1999). She is also the winner of two Governor General’s Awards (1944 and 1947) and the Queen’s Medal. She is an Officer of the Order of Canada (1987), and is considered by many to be the Grand Dame of Canadian poetry. She has had a long career in Canada, the U.S. and Zambia working as an editor, broadcast journalist and university professor with degrees from UBC and U of T in Modern Languages, Education and Social Work as well as a diploma from Sorbonne in Paris. She was the founder, and for many years editor, of the literary quarterly CVII. She is also a founding member of Amnesty International (Canada), the Committee for an Independent Canada, and the League of Canadian Poets. The B.C. book prize for poetry is named in her honour. Dorothy Livesay passed away in 1996 but her contribution to Canadian literature will live on forever.

Dorothy Livesay's profile page

Editorial Reviews

"A man-loving, woman-affirming feminist poet, Livesay writes [in The Phases of Love] with a moral authority and simple eloquence that continue to increase . . . She addresses us with the unrivalled power and serenity of a famous woman of wisdom and vision, a Sibyl." — Wendy Keitner, CV II

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