Arc 59 Winter 2008

Arc 59: Winter 2008: the Woozy issue

The annual winter issue of Arc features the winners of Arc's International Poem of the Year Contest along with Editors' Choices, and the winners of the Diana Brebner Prize.


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Withdrawal | Makeup

Written by Guy Simser, these poems were read by Stephen Brockwell (judge of the 2007 Diana Brebner Prize) at Arc 59 launch, Tuesday, January 15, 2008. Also broadcast on CKCU FM Radio 93.1 in January 2008. “Withdrawal” won the Diana Brebner Prize and appeared in Arc 59. Stephen Brockwel dishes about the entries and winners of the Diana Brebner Prize.

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(W)hole

Read by LM Rochefort at Arc 59 launch, Tuesday, January 15, 2008. Also broadcast on CKCU FM Radio 93.1 in January 2008. “(W)hole” was runner-up (Honourable Mention) for the Diana Brebner Prize and appeared in Arc 59.

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Putting Things Together

Read by LM Rochefort at Arc 59 launch, Tuesday, January 15, 2008. Also broadcast on CKCU FM Radio 93.1 in January 2008.

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After the Operation | Joke

Read by Linda Besner at Arc 59 launch, Tuesday, January 15, 2008. Also broadcast on CKCU FM Radio 93.1 in January 2008. “After the Operation” appeared in Arc 59.

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Dinner with the Pratts | Small Psalm

Read by Rhonda Douglas at Arc 59 launch, Tuesday, January 15, 2008. Also broadcast on CKCU FM Radio 93.1 in January 2008. “Dinner with the Pratts” and “Small Psalm” are from a second manuscript in progress. “Dinner with the Pratts” appeared in Arc 59.

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Press Release: January 11, 2008

Get Woozy with Arc Poetry Magazine

You’re invited to the launch of Arc 59, featuring special guest, East Coast poet Sharon McCartney

Ottawa’s literary scene may still be feeling woozy after the holidays—thanks to Arc Poetry Magazine.

Arc 59—the “Woozy” issue—makes its official debut 7:30 p.m., Tuesday, January 15, at a launch hosted by world-renowned independent Ottawa bookstore, Collected Works (1242 Wellington St. W at Holland).

Special guest, Fredericton poet Sharon McCartney, author of Against (2007), The Love Song of Laura Ingalls Wilder (2007), and Switchgrass Stills (2006), among others, will also read from some of her latest work, including pieces first seen in Arc.

The Winter 2008 issue of Arc is packed with goodies for the new year, among which, most notably, are the prize-winning poems from the 2007 Diana Brebner Prize and 11th annual Poem of the Year contest.

Guy Simser’s “Withdrawl” took top honours in this year’s Brebner competition, judged by Ottawa poet Stephen Brockwell, while LM Rochefort earned an honourable mention. First prize in the Poem of the Year contest, judged by Canada’s poet laureate John Steffler, went to Susan Elmslie for “Box;” Degan Davis took second prize for “Winter;” Aurian Haller’s “from ‘Seamless’” was awarded the third prize, and E. Alex Pierce, Jamella Hagen and Lorri Neilsen Glenn all received honourable mentions.

The evening will feature readings of the winning selections, as well as readings of other new poetry contained in the “Woozy” issue of Arc (including the poem that contains the word “woozy”!). Come have a drink with us, sit back, and enjoy the poetry!

FMI:
promotions [at] arcpoetry [dot] ca
www.collected-works.com

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Knock, knock: Is the real Atwood still there?

Excerpt from Feature Review

Margaret Atwood. The Door. Toronto: McClelland & Stewart (2007).

If there’s a Canadian poem readers know by heart, chances are it’s Margaret Atwood’s four-liner “You Fit into Me”. A quick start: “You fit into me / like a hook into an eye.” A quicker ending: “A fish hook / an open eye.” As short lyrics go, it’s flawless: perfectly judged and perfectly ruthless.

“You Fit into Me” was published in 1971, and its sting is a fair example of Atwood’s method at the time. The lovey-dovey snugness we associate with hooks and eyes is exactly the conditioned response she uses to draw blood. But you really have to go back to the late sixties and mid-seventies—when her fish hooks were at their sharpest—to understand why she caused such a stir when she came on the scene. The Circle Game appeared in 1966 looking more or less like any other slim mid-century debut. But the differences were important. Daughter of an entomologist and student of Northrop Frye, Atwood fronted a poetry whose soundings of female consciousness were forensic and archetype-obsessed. She was, at heart, a young poet with an unstoppable knack (six books in the eight years from 1966 and 1974) for writing striking descriptions of extreme emotional states. Some of it recalled Anne Wilkinson, who also overhauled romantic emblems and came to conclusions that, for their time, were just as unflinching (“I’d love this body more / If graved in rigid wood / It could not move.”) But while Wilkinson’s poems simmered without boiling over, Atwood remade her anger into a series of attacks with no retreat.

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Harold Rhenisch on Don Domanski's All Our Wonder Unavenged

Brief Review

Don Domanski. All Our Wonder Unavenged. Toronto: Brick, 2007.

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Withdrawal

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(W)hole

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