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CBC
08-04-2025
- Entertainment
- CBC
Devotional Forensics by Joseph Kidney
With dazzling wit and brittle tenderness, multi-award-winning poet Joseph Kidney catches all in his highly anticipated debut collection. Kidney's rich, innovative imagery finds the durable in the contemporary and articulates a new vision of human vitality from inside a world that always seems on the verge of ending. Channeling influences as wide as Shakespeare and Anne Carson, Virgil and John Ashbery, Devotional Forensics takes full advantage of the liberties of language, playing with its boundaries. This formally inventive collection exalts the ordinary and fleshes out the metaphysical, constructing theologies out of wildfires, classical music, and garbage collection, while engaging seamlessly with everything from renaissance literature to family intimacy, from modern art to biological science. At once timeless and urgent, Kidney's poems dance through all the miniature apocalypses that compose the evolution of time into history. (From Goose Lane Editions) Joseph Kidney is a writer originally from B.C., now working as a lecturer at Stanford University. His previous works include the chapbook Terra Firma, Pharma Sea. Kidney's poems have been featured in Best Canadian Poetry 2024, Arc, Vallum, The Malahat Review, Oberon, The Fiddlehead and Periodicities, among others. He won the Short Grain Contest from Grain and The Young Buck Poetry Prize (now the Foster Poetry Prize) from CV2 for the best poem by an author under 35, and was shortlisted for the Bridport Prize, the Bedford International Poetry Award, The Malahat Review's Far Horizons Contest, The Malahat Review's Long Poem Prize, a Canadian National Magazine Award and the Arc's Poem of the Year three times.


CBC
08-04-2025
- Entertainment
- CBC
Speech Dries Here on the Tongue edited by Rasiqra Revulva, Amanda Shankland and Hollay Ghadery
Speech Dries Here on the Tongue is an anthology of poetry by Canadian authors exploring the relationship between environmental collapse and mental health. This threat of environmental collapse has brought with it a sense of impending annihilation and has contributed to the current mental health crisis, made crueller by a global pandemic that highlighted our fragile nature. These are poems by writers who have used their words to both articulate and navigate this crisis, unpacking the complex interplay between mental and environmental health in order to alert, inform, and inspire readers. (From Porcupine's Quill) Speech Dries Here on the Tongue is available in April 2025. Rasiqra Revulva is a disabled queer femme writer, editor, multimedia artist, musician and performer. Her previous works include the poetry chapbooks If You Forget the Whipped Cream, You're No Good As A Woman and Sailor, C'est l'heure. Her debut full-length poetry collection Cephalopography 2.0 was longlisted for the 2021 Laurel Prize. Amanda Shankland is a Ottawa-based poetry and short story writer. She is a PhD candidate in the political science department at Carleton University, and holds a master's degree in public policy and administration as well as an honours bachelor's degree in arts and contemporary studies from Toronto Metropolitan University. Hollay Ghadery is a writer and radio host from rural Ontario on Anishinaabe land. Her work has been featured in The Malahat Review, The Fiddlehead, The Antigonish Review and CBC Parents, among others. Ghadery's memoir Fuse won the 2023 Canadian Bookclub Award, and the title poem of her poetry collection Rebellion Box won The New Quarterly's Nick Blatchford Occasional Verse Prize. Her short fiction collection Widow Fantasies was published in 2024, with her debut novel forthcoming in 2026 and her children's book in 2027.