The Brave Never Write Poetry
By (Author) Daniel Jones
Coach House Books
Coach House Books
30th April 2011
2nd
Canada
General
Non Fiction
811
Paperback
96
Width 127mm, Height 203mm
155g
The brave ride streetcars to jobs
early in the morning, have traffic accidents,
rob banks. The brave have children, relationships,
mortgages. The brave never write these things
down in notebooks. The brave die and they are
dead.
First published in 1985, when Daniel Jones was just twenty-six, The Brave Never Write Poetry, the poet/critic/novelists lone collection of poems, was a cult hit, turning poetry on its head before its author (then known simply as Jones) swore off verse entirely. Written in a direct, plainspoken, autobiographical and at times confessional style in the tradition of Charles Bukowski and Al Purdy, these confrontational poems about sex and boredom, drugs and suicide, document Jones depressive, alcoholic years as an enfant terrible.
This long overdue revised edition brings Jones unforgettable voice to a new generation of readers and includes the complete text of the original collection (including Jones own sardonic assessments of his own poetry) and a new postscript essay by poet/critic Kevin Connolly.
'Reading The Brave Never Write Poetry is a little like reliving an adolescent crush -- there is still something irresistible in a bad boy, especially one with literary talent.' -- New Pages Review 'Gritty, honest, and caustic ... Reading it is like stumbling over someone's opened journal.' -- National Post
Daniel Jones was born in Hamilton, Ontario, in 1959, and lived in Toronto from 1977 until his suicide in 1994. His books include the experimental novel Obsessions, a collection of minimalist short stories, The People One Knows, and the posthumously published 1978 (Rush Hour Revisions, re-released by Three O'Clock Press), a novel set in the Toronto punk scene, which Jones was working on at the time of his death.