Introducing The Danforth
Review's Poetry Editors:
Geoffrey Cook
Geoffrey Cook
has published poetry and essays in many Canadian journals, including
Descant, Fiddlehead, Pottersfield Portfolio, and The Canadian Journal
of Comparative Literature. He teaches English at John Abbott College
outside Montreal, where he lives.
What do you
like and dislike about contemporary Canadian poetry? (Name names.)
I like Richard
Sanger, Ken Babstock and Stephanie Bolster - which is as contemporary
as I get. I admire the intelligence, energy, sensitivity and craftsmanship
of these poets. Before them - but still 'contemporary' - I like
Bringhurst, MacPherson and Nowlan (as well as the songs of Leonard
Cohen). I dislike Susan Musgrave and Al Purdy; I particularly dislike
their imitators. What is admirable about "Canadian" poetry is its
range and diversity, however problematic that makes Canadian politics,
cultural policies or academic dissertations on a Canadian sensibility.
A revealing confession: I don't like the mania of 'poetry slams'
or 'spoken-word poetry', though I admit it raises the profile of
the art. And I don't think that the future belongs to the suburbs.
Describe
the types of poems you'd like to see in TDR.
Generalities
are the best guide, otherwise one gets prescriptive, and I have
no intention of becoming partisan or promulgating a manifesto. So
I would like to see poetry that is free of cliche - intellectually,
emotionally, spiritually and technically. In particular I would
like to see conscientious craftsmanship; I don't mean only traditional
forms, but I certainly mean purposeful use of line breaks based
on rhythm instead of, at best, visual puns. It is self-conscious
craftsmanship which reveals the soul's uniqueness, not vice versa.
Name a favorite
poet, and say why.
I think Canadian
artists are well past the anxiety of assuming the world stage, so
I can say my 'favourite poet' is not Canadian or singular: Seamus
Heaney because of his lyricism and rural imagery; Derek Walcott
because of his narrative and epic impulse and his sea imagery; and
Joseph Brodsky because of his irony, intelligence and formal sophistication.
Shane Neilson
Shane Neilson
is a lean, mean, poetry machine from New Brunswick. He is a lover
of small children and animals (but not that kind of love.) He is
living in Newfoundland and has published in Canada, America, England
and Ireland. He has won the 1999 Canadian Poetry Association's contest
for best poem, was shortlisted for the THIS magazine's 2000 Literary
Hunt for poetry, and was shortlisted for the 2000 Shaunt Basmajian
Chapbook Award. He is a really great guy. A swell guy. Son of a
preacher-man. Member of the literati. He is vrai poetique.
He is only slightly annoying.
What do you
like and dislike about contemporary Canadian poetry? (Name names.)
Like: snuff
poems, garbage poems, limericks about Nantucket. Despise poems like
grocery lists that are "heavily grounded in the senses". Specificity
is not the only way. Keep your objects to yourself, gentle shoppers.
Like experiments that don't go awry. Don't like Susan Musgrave.
Like much else. Don't like much more.
Describe
the types of poems you'd like to see in TDR.
Send me your
oddities, your oddballs, your odds. I want leper poems, poems about
necrophilia, and pica. You're guaranteed publication if you write
one of those, good or bad.
Name a favorite
poet, and say why.
Oh, I'll confess
to a nasty Purdy habit. I know it's not cool, but nevertheless.
Why? The man was gutsy and stupid enough to indiscriminately publish;
some poems were so lateral but direct I knew I wanted to BE him.
I coveted his existence on the basis of poems like "Necropsy of
Love", ones that had irregular rhythms and meant something, something
that when paraphrased is irredeemably trite. His signed firsts shuffle
on my shelves.
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