the rose concordance
- Publisher
- Book*hug Press
- Initial publish date
- Nov 2009
- Category
- Canadian, Women Authors
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9781897388464
- Publish Date
- Nov 2009
- List Price
- $18.00
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Description
In The Rose Concordance, Angela Carr sets up the rules for a game and then breaks them. The poems trace a constellation of fountains, whose waters lap from an erotic medieval poem. Luxury rushes headlong into Felony, Love hears Irony in Ecstasy. Like fountains, these poems resist any one enduring shape or reading. For in Carr’s voice, water is dappled, and wind catches the fountain and moves it sideways at night when no one is looking. In the mist of words, complicity is vilified and the precious is tenderly chided. The Rose Concordance is a fountain garden that invites the reader to tarry, and drink.
About the author
Poet and translator Angela Carr is the author of two poetry collections, most recently The Rose Concordance (2009), and several chapbooks, including Risk Accretions. Selections from her new work in progress, Here in There, have recently appeared in New American Writing, The Lana Turner Journal of Poetry and Opinion, and Canada and Beyond: A Journal of Canadian Literary and Cultural Studies. She has published and performed her work internationally. A doctoral student in Comparative Literary and Media Studies at the University of Montreal, Angela currently divides her time between Montreal and New York City.
Editorial Reviews
"It is as though Carr's language has erupted from a fountain and into the air. She lets the wind take hold of it, bend it slightly, push it aside, but sometimes the wind relinquishes and just lets the language flow. Her language is smooth but sometimes stutters, fluctuating from long lines of prose to short stichic bursts. It repeats, shifts, or departs completely from lines before, resulting in a beautiful, challenging and worthwhile read." —Broken Pencil
“Carr achieves an exquisite balance of sensual fleshiness, confession and conceptual abstraction… A rare pleasure.” —The Globe and Mail
“Through repetition, fragmentation, and translation, Carr makes texts, bodies, and buildings pliable.” —Canadian Literature