New ebooks From Canadian Indies

Literary Criticism

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"My Own Portrait in Writing"

"My Own Portrait in Writing"

Self-Fashioning in the Letters of Vincent van Gogh
by Patrick Grant
edition:eBook
tagged :
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Excerpt

"I’d also like to see if I can’t make my own portrait in writing. First I start by saying that to my mind the same person supplies material for very diverse portraits."---Vincent van Gogh, Arles, 1888

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A Karenina Companion

A Karenina Companion

by C.J.G. Turner
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
tagged : russian & former soviet union
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A.S. Byatt and the Heliotropic Imagination

A.S. Byatt and the Heliotropic Imagination

by Jane Campbell
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
tagged : women authors, english, irish, scottish, welsh, 20th century
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Aboriginal Canada Revisited

Aboriginal Canada Revisited

edited by Kerstin Knopf
edition:eBook
tagged : native american studies, social services & welfare, canadian
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Activating the Heart

Activating the Heart

Storytelling, Knowledge Sharing, and Relationship
edited by Julia Christensen; Christopher Cox & Lisa Szabo-Jones
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
tagged : indigenous studies, native american
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Alan Crawley and Contemporary Verse

by Joan McCullagh
edition:eBook
also available: Hardcover
tagged : semiotics & theory
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Alien Heart

Alien Heart

The Life and Work of Margaret Laurence
by Lyall Powers
edition:eBook
tagged : literary, women, canadian
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All These Roads

All These Roads

The Poetry of Louis Dudek
by Louis Dudek, edited by Karis Shearer, afterword by Frank Davey
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
tagged : canadian, literary
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Excerpt

For William Carlos Williams by Louis Dudek

You want your truths told of you—

those wavery lines!

Each pencil mark's a fiddlehead

unfolding to an island of wild fern,

O hell, did you have to do it

now, Bill

when we were just getting

the whiplash of your New Measure, crack

of the words in the sun, over the woman eating

plums, over the burning greens?

When we were getting the hang of it, to your glory,

and bringing the baskets home,

stuff you planted in your Earlier and Later

Collected Poems

praising the world

and talking to the cabman

about “Pound and economics” so many beginnings

Those forceps, stethoscopes (the way to their hearts)

and medical books you could never keep up with

—thrown away, finished?

Isn't it (death) stupid? That all a man is,

those immediate moments

you tried to cling to, should be thought “ephemeral”?

Death is a liar, Bill Williams Don't think for a minute

that we believe him It's all the same

It's as you said, every minute of it, here, now, real and forever.

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