A Lovely Gutting

By Robin Durnford
Series: Hugh MacLennan Poetry Series
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Paperback : 9780773539846, 98 pages, February 2012
Ebook (PDF) : 9780773586758, 98 pages, February 2012
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780773586840, 98 pages, February 2012

Description

"from this sea I am fished, / gutted and stripped, / bled and bound, / on your ship I sail, / or go down." A Lovely Gutting echoes with the music of traditional nature poetry, but its romantic style is ripped by rawness. These poems - enraged and erotic, tormented and tender - swirl around the pain of personal loss, ebbing and surging like the North Atlantic. Durnford pictures a Newfoundland not found in postcards. Her verse roams an island only half-wild, a ramshackle world of crumbling outports and post-industrial landscapes. In one town, the site of a former US Air Force base, stands a crumbling theatre of "piss-stained crushed velvet seats," the ghost of Mae West still lingering. The ocean no longer spits up cod but the view is strangely sublime. A startling collection from a talented new voice in Canadian poetry, A Lovely Gutting splits open the guts of grief. It is an unflinching meditation on the loss of a culture and a father and on the struggle to preserve and honour what remains.

Reviews

"Part homage to, part radical disjuncture from the Romantic tradition, A Lovely Gutting unsettles the notion that what no longer remains cannot be revisited, will not emerge from the darkness in 'a delicate splash of sea-light.' Durnford is an important and talented new voice in Canadian poetry, and this collection offers powerful renderings of the wastelands we inhabit and make homes out of." Quill & Quire

"[Robin] write[s] poetry with such strong lyricism and beauty of phraseology that you feel it hum within you as you read it. Each word is chosen carefully, knowingly, the way a painter might choose a brushstroke, but none of them are the kinds of three-ce

"An economy of language and rhythms that are blunt and consistent, as if her words were beaten out on a drum, establish Durnford's credentials as a nature poet of considerable scope." Susan Walker, The Malahat Review