Let the Empire Down
By (Author) Alexandra Oliver
Biblioasis
Biblioasis
10th May 2016
Canada
General
Non Fiction
Poetry by individual poets
811.6
Paperback
72
Width 134mm, Height 210mm
85g
In her second book, Alexandra Oliver takes us on a journey of escape from the suburbs of Canada to Glasgow, Scotland. Training her eye on the localson the streets, by rivers, in museums, on playgrounds, in their own homes, in the ill-starred town of LockerbieOliver reflects on issues of exile, memory and identity, while traveling back into her own past.
"An incredible feat of vision and voice ... technically, nothing is out of Oliver's grasp. Her go-to iambic pentameter can swallow anything in its path."--The National Post "Alexandra Oliver has many arrows in her quiver--all of them sharpened to a fine point. In satirical work like "The Classics Lesson," she is mordantly funny. Yet she can also treat her subjects quietly and with touching understatement, as in "Chinese Food with Gavra, Aged Three." Ms. Oliver is, moreover, technically resourceful in the best sense ... This is an excellent and entertaining collection."--Timothy Steele, author of Sapphics against Anger and Other Poems "It is sometimes argued that our disjunctive times need to be mirrored by disjunctive forms: only aesthetic disorder can respond to our experience. Such a simplicity is disproven by Alexandra Oliver's Meeting the Tormentors in Safeway, in which disjunctions of many kinds (such as the one in her title) are brought to order by the poet's refining passion and corrosive wit. Here are brilliantly contemporary poems in traditional forms, the work of a stunning new voice."--Charles Martin, author of Unwritten "Alexandra Oliver is in full command of a saber wit and impeccable ear. With these she tackles nothing less than the unsettling hazards, absurd encounters, and oddball ironies of our modern predicament to make poems that bite and entertain... Lucky the reader along for the ride."--Jeanne Marie Beaumont, author of Placebo Effects "One of the most exciting things about her work is the way she takes a different route from the in-your-face newness and hybridity our market now demands."--The Walrus
Alexandra Oliver was born in Vancouver, BC. Her last book Meeting the Tormentors in Safeway (Biblioasis 2013) was the recipient of the 2014 Pat Lowther award. Oliver is the co-editor (with Annie Finch) of Measure for Measure: An Anthology of Poetic Meters (Random House/Everyman 2014) as well as a co-editor of Canadian formalist journal The Rotary Dial, and a contributing editor for both Partisan and ARC Poetry. She lives in Burlington, Ontario.