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Book Info | | | enlarge picture
| Iron Mountain | | Author: | Mark Frutkin | ISBN: | 0888784244 | Format: | Handover | Publish Date: | June, 2005 | | | | | | | | | Book Review | | |
Book Description Of one of Mark Frutkins previous books of verse, Poetry Canada Review said it provided "a supernatural fusion of the earthbound with the heavenly to forge the lightning of poetry." Divided into two sections, one inspired by ancient Chinese art, the other limning the ambiguities and incongruities of the contemporary human condition, Frutkins new volume of poetry, Iron Mountain, often presents human beings wandering in the wilderness between two abysses while still appreciating the smell of pines, the softness of the rain, the brilliance of the stars, the hum of the computer, and the jostle of the crowd on the bus. These are poems of translucent delicacy harbouring hard truths where "A Taoist priest gulps the elixir/of immortality and blows away/in the dust,/a young Chinese girl/bumps me in the crowd/ prompting a shiver/like a startled phoenix/dressed in my skin." In Frutkins vision the entire world is a written landscape that speaks to us of time, of change, of immutability, of radiant emptiness.
About the Author Mark Frutkin has published seven books of fiction and poetry, including the recent novel Slow Lightning. His novel Atmospheres Apollinaire was shortlisted for the Governor Generals Award for fiction and for the Trillium Prize. He lives in Ottawa, ON.
Iron Mountain
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