In his second book of poems, David Martin digs deep into an examination of the world using the lens of geology. With lyrically experimental poems expanding and retracting, this collection finds sonic and conceptual energy from the perspective of deep time and the geological forces that have shaped and continue to shape the Earth. Enacting seismic shifts, catastrophes, and erosions throughout the natural and cultural worlds, Martin's poetic practice pushes forward to contend with the contemporary environmental changes and the structure of the Anthropocene that affect how we live in the twenty-first century. The collection veers from the Rocky Mountains and explorations of "fossilized" towns to family histories and myth-soaked theories, all while seeking a balance between disruptive poetic techniques and the centred lyrical voice.
Praise for David Martin.
"Through its daring, and brilliantly challenging, use of diction, syntax and imagery, it embodies the best of contemporary experimental verse. Tar Swan urgently speaks to central concerns of our time, particularly here in Canada: the consequences of coal and oil extraction, environmental degradation, and our responsibility to the natural world." -CBC Poetry Prize Citation
"Martin explores.myths in gritty, sensual, and historically vivid language. This ambitious debut immerses us in the tar of archaeology and the bite of our own environmental dilemma." -2019 Raymond Souster Award Jury Citation (shortlisted)
"This is a remarkable collection." -Anne Burke, The Prairie Journal
"This book is a wild ride, chilling at times though leavened with dark humour." -Sid Marty, Alberta Views
"Martin's complex collection criticizes the hubristic development of the tar sands and unearths fixed forms to reckon with environmental change." -Kait Pinder, Canadian Literature
"Martin's Tar Swan illuminates the degradation of the non-human and human world in four fictive voices bound by a specific thematic and historical period.... this work quickens." -Deanna Radford, ARC Poetry Magazine