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list price: $18.00
edition:Paperback
also available: eBook
category: Poetry
published: Apr 2015
ISBN:9781771660952
publisher: Book*hug Press

Merz Structure No. 2 Burnt by Children at Play

by Jake Kennedy

tagged: death, canadian
Description

In 1981 Jake Kennedy accidentally burnt down an abandoned house. Years later as an adult, he read a story about how Kurt Schwitters' "interior house-sculpture" ("Merz Structure No. 2") was destroyed in 1951 after some children playing with matches accidentally burnt the building down. This sad 'unmaking,' so similar in nature to his own haunting experience, became the inspiration for Merz Structure No. 2 Burnt by Children at Play, a collection of experimental poetry that explores the dynamic, if often unsettling, relationship between making and unmaking, bliss and pain, utterance and silence.

As diverse in form as they are in artistic/cultural references, the poems of Merz Structure No. 2 invoke an endless bounty of characters: the poet remembers Harold Ramis; Kafka summons the courage to tell his dad where to go; another tornado razes another small town; Yorick returns to run balls-out into the sea; Louise Bourgeois smashes a tea cup against one of her sculptures.

Readers who connect with Phil Hall's artistic investigations in Killdeer and Lisa Robertson's clear-eyed take on humanity in Magenta Soul Whip will enjoy Kennedy's feeling examination of loss in Merz Structure No. 2 Burnt by Children at Play.

About the Author

Jake Kennedy lives in beautiful, unceded syilx territory. Jake’s home city is Kelowna where he works at Okanagan College. He’s the author of several volumes of poetry and is currently working on “Mr. Cho Stayed For Tea”—a collaborative project (with Paul Hong, Paola Poletto, and Ivetta Kang) involving as a source-text a series of mid-twentieth century farm journals.

Editorial Reviews

"Kennedy's style is stark but suggests much."—Jonathan Ball for Winnipeg Free Press


"By turns unexpected, provocative, surreal and amusing."—Brent Wood for University of Toronto Quarterly


"For all the tight lyric cadence of [Kennedy's] poems [in Apollinaire's Speech to the War Medic], there is a lightness that moves at breathtaking speed, at breathtaking ease, leaping from point to point."—rob mclennan for Galatea Resurrects

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