Toronto ON/Nanaimo BC: From Nanaimo-based poet Neil Surkan, following the full-length poetry collections On High (2018) and Unbecoming (2021) [see my review of such here], both from McGill-Queen’s University Press, as well as the chapbooks Super, Natural (Anstruther Press, 2017), Their Queer Tenderness (Toronto ON: knife|fork|book, 2020) [see my review of such here] and Die Workbook (Calgary AB: The Blasted Tree, 2024) [see my review of such here] is Ruin (knife|fork|book, 2023), a title I clearly missed when it first appeared. One might think, with at least two chapbooks I’m aware of over the past couple of years, might a new full-length collection be on the horizon? These are short, rather tight, first-person lyrics that run through meditation, reflection and family, whether working a long, extended, poem-long sentence-thought or compact lyric. I’m curious to see how the poems here might fit with his work from, for example, Die Workbook, what the shape of that potential full-length might be.
Reflection
I’ve come to the mirror
and seen
myself for the first time
in years, not as I fear
others judge me mid-chore
or with love, but as
a creature who peers
frankly, knowing neither
shame
nor the threat of heaven.
Toronto ON: I’m very pleased that Toronto writer Cary Fagan has been producing a series of reprints and reissues as part of his chapbook press, Found Object, with one of the more recent titles by Toronto writer, editor and publisher (of the late and legendary press The Mercury Press) Beverley Daurio, A Broken Cup (2025). A Broken Cup is excerpted from her full-length poetry collection If Summer Had a Knife (Toronto ON: Wolsak and Wynn, 1987), a book, obviously, long out of print. I’m curious if this particular selection exists as a kind of “selected poems,” akin to a “best” of what that particular full-length had to offer, nearly four decades on, or if an assemblage of poems salvaged into a form that felt self-contained (or a bit of both, really). Without knowing the source, it all becomes speculation. “I am a slow writer; the poems in A Broken Cup were composed over several years,” Daurio writes in her short introduction, “Thoughts from a 505 Dundas Streetcar,” “within this newly electric and alive city. These poems may not seem political, but their very existence felt to me incredibly daring. I love Basho and Hopkins and Thomas and Plath, but I was hungry for writing that breathed the air of this place and time.” Further on, she offers:
Re-reading these poems, I am reminded of these times with fondness, of the living and charmed world created by so many caring, brilliant, open-minded people, and the unwavering light that shines from the lanterns they carried.
Before this re-issue, I actually hadn’t been aware that Daurio wrote poems, far more aware of her as the author of fiction (and one of the finest editors of same, through her time as a publisher). The poems have a timeless quality to them, both of their time and immediately fresh, offering clipped narratives across distances, pointed phrases and descriptive patter. I keep hoping from further prose from her, aware that it has been years since she’s released any new work, and this appearance of a reissue does make me hope that there might be further work possible What other gems might be hiding in Beverley Daurio’s files?
driving into winter
dear mom: just a note to
tell you i missed you
by a few hours, went through
stop signs,
cranked up the radio, but
when i got in
there were three cars in
the driveway
and dad was in the hall
closet with his face
in your coats, he was
hugging your coats.
the whole way up i was driving
into winter,
not a slow or subtle winter,
there’s just
snow
suddenly.
not the heart of winter
either though
the highway’s rather like
a spike
and you can fancy somehow
driving it
that there is such a
thing as control.
steven and gregg had
eaten and nana poured me a brandy
which i didn’t spill,
thanks to the shape of the glass.
the green walls were hung
with your
natures mortes, also the
painting of the empty
café. nothing really dead
in any of them,
no acknowledgement of
withered apples lying
useful on the grass, no
presumption
of comparison.
dad said the nurses sat
you up in bed and
combed your hair. i wish i
had a picture
of that. otherwise, it’s
so easy to pretend
otherwise.
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