The Least Important Man
By (Author) Alex Boyd
Biblioasis
Biblioasis
24th July 2012
31st May 2012
Canada
General
Non Fiction
811.6
Paperback
64
Width 133mm, Height 209mm
113g
The least important man was a boy in the 1970s. He remembers clubhouses, plastic soldiers, swimming lessons, rocket launches, a grandfathers letters from World War I. Those days are long gone, however: now the least important man is grown up. He lives in the city. He suffers endless rush hours, he dreams of other places, he drinks cheap coffee and crosses streets and sees explosions on the TV news. But through it all hes still thinking about that old life, and wondering what it meant, and asking in his quiet way how he might reconcile two such transient worlds with each other.
The Least Important Man is the second collection from Gerald Lampert Prize-winning poet Alex Boyd: sober, self-sacrificing, and handsome, its a book for those who want poetry to reassert its dignity and authority in everyday life.
Alex Boyd is the author of Making Bones Walk (Luna Publications 2007) and the winner of the Gerald Lampert Award. He lives in Toronto, Ontario.
"Consistently strong. Boyd's images and metaphors are deft." - Winnipeg Free Press "The poet can work magic in miniature: poems about chess pieces, toy soldiers, and house spiders each animate aspects of civic and personal life ... 'Basil Rathbone Meets God,' 'A Stuntman Destroys the Hate Window,' 'Samuel Drowns, at Thirty' and others are among the book's most beautiful and surprising. By the end of the collection I was able to count a number of these standouts. And man, that is important."-Quill & Quire
Alex Boyd: Alex Boyd is the author of Making Bones Walk (Luna 2007), the editor of Northern Poetry Review, and the co-founder of the Best Canadian Essays series; Making Bones Walk won the Gerald Lampert Award for best first book of poetry. Boyd writes for the Globe & Mail and lives in Toronto.