Workbook
By (Author) Steven Heighton
ECW Press,Canada
ECW Press,Canada
1st October 2011
Canada
General
Non Fiction
620.82
Paperback
74
91g
Since selections first appeared in the New Quarterly and the National Post as part of The Afterword, Steven Heightons memos and dispatches to himself a writers pointed, cutting take on his own work and the work of writing have been tweeted and retweeted, discussed and tacked to bulletin boards everywhere. Coalesced, completed, and collected here for the first time, a wholly new kind of book has emerged, one thats as much about creative process as it is about created product, at once about living life and the writing life. I stick to a form that bluntly admits its own limitation and partiality and makes a virtue of both things, Heighton writes in his foreword, a form that lodges no claim to encyclopedic completeness, balance, or conclusive truth. At times, this form (Im going to call it the memo) is a hybrid of the epigram and the prcis, or of the aphorism and the abstract, the maxim and the debaters initial be-it-resolved. At other times its a meditation in the Aurelian sense, a dispatch-to-self that aspires to address other selves readers as well. Its in these very aspirations, reaching both back into and forward in time and, ultimately, outside of the pages of the book itself that Heighton offers perhaps the freshest, most provocative picture of what it means to create the literature of the modern world.
"Heighton goes on to offer helpful hints on editing, criticism, overwriting, trends in pop culture, reading, poetry, grief as muse, clerical hyper-efficiency and some fun with Al Purdy's shirt. His book is a delight." --StarPhoenix
Steven Heighton is the author of Afterlands, which was a New York Times Book Review Editors Choice, Every Lost Country, Patient Frame, and The Shadow Boxer, which was a Publishers Weekly Book of the year in 2002. He lives in Kingston, Ontario.