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Showing posts with label Away. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Away. Show all posts

Saturday, 11 October 2014

Beyond (poem by Sharon Henderson)



Chris

I wrote this poem at ZRG some time ago, before I started to read Away. And now, finding it in my journal, I am a little haunted. I am thoroughly enjoying the book.

 

Beyond

The old land steward
went down the river
beyond the bridge
beyond the dam
down through the rapids,
but the water spirit
knowing the danger beyond
hurled him under
and carved into his back
with raging rocks.


Sharon Henderson



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Hi Sharon,
Thanks for the ZRG poem. I don't know if it's overtly about my semi-disastrous kayak trip I wrote & posted about, or if it's just another of the many coincidences & synchronous events which occur with regularity there  ;  )

I'm pleased you are enjoying AWAY. I just finished SISTERS IN THE WILDERNESS, another must read for living where we do; but maybe read ROUGHING IT IN THE BUSH first, if you haven't read it already.

peace & poetry power!
Chris ... & Chase Wrffffffffffffffffffffffffffff!  (thanks for the great poem!)   

p.s. my back still twinges daily from those sharp rocks
p.p.s. I'm posting this on my blog - hope that's OK?

Thursday, 17 October 2013

The Alphabet Stones (review) - future Governor General winner



Clear room on your bookshelves for The Alphabet Stones. This book is a keeper - it better be a contender for the Governor General's Award, the Giller,  Canada Reads - all of Canada's major literary awards - it's that damn good!

Make room between Jane Urquhart's amazing novel, Away -  pioneer life amid haunting forest mysteries on the edge of the Canadian Shield, and Miriam Toews' coming-of-age novel, A Complicated Kindness -  growing up in a dysfunctional Mennonite community.

Acclaimed area author Ursula Pflug's novel parallels much of the territory of both these two pillars of Canadian literature, and much, much more. Pflug makes us understand and appreciate the abandoned homesteads, fields and forests of eastern Ontario where powerful local spirits prevail, which most humans fleetingly occupy with unseeing eyes. Special people, seers, young women open to all possibilities with shamanistic awareness, these are the finders of the gates to a truer and deeper awareness in all these novels. The prose in Stones is poetic, perhaps even more evocative and haunting than Urquhart's masterpiece of mental illness and Toews understanding of the incredible coping mechanisms a teenager much learn to survive among dysfunctional adults ruling a bizzaro fundamentalist world.

If you dare to see through the eyes of young seer Jody Bear, who was born to read the alphabet stones in a deserted First Nations fairy field, you will begin to comprehend the haunting truths which live out here on the edge of civilization. I have lived here, in what Al Purdy called "The Country North of Belleville",  for a quarter of a century, and I have also experienced powerful encounters with other realms, other times and realities. But it has taken a master storyteller, a magi with words and vision, to capture and tell this magic.

At this planetary juncture, even here on northern Turtle Island, we all live in a bizarro world ruled by the unwise and unseeing. Reading The Alphabet Stones will give you a crash course in learning where true magic still lives and thrives. There are real gateways and visionary options to lead us out of the mess this small planet is now in, and The Alphabet Stones is a good way to begin learning to read and live by ancient runes and signs showing  ways of becoming truly harmonious with our magical and sacred environment.

Ursula Pflug
The Alphabet Stones
Blue Denim Press, 2013
ISBN 978-0-9881478-3-6
227 pages, $20.00

available from Amazon and other online booksellers            

I highly recommend this book for readers of all ages, from young adult (YA) up.


review by Chris Faiers

retired Head Librarian/CEO,
Marmora Public Library
Stirling Public Library


The Alphabet Stones a novel by Ursula Pflug