The Truth About Facts

By (author): Bart Vautour

An A-to-Z compendium that finds the wonder in information overload.

The Truth About Facts makes intimate the seeming noise of information and facts by using the tradition of the alphabet book to get back to basics: to make room for wonder, devotion, and a reinvigorated role for poetry in both quick and methodological thought. Vautour leads his readers on an info-drenched, abecedarian jaunt that is both tongue-in-cheek and unquestionably earnest. Ranging from topics as assorted as Brazil Nuts and Juggling to meditations on Rememoration and the Zodiac, The Truth About Facts moves between the surety of aphorism and the anxieties of critique.

The Truth about Facts subtly and satisfyingly illuminates already existing connections in the seemingly far-flung.”Canadian Literature

“If, like me, you find yourself randomly clicking through Wikipedia articles late into the night, you will love this delightful ramble through the facts.”—Sachiko Murakami

AUTHOR

Bart Vautour

Bart Vautour is a writer, editor, and teacher. He is editor of the Throwback Series of books for Invisible Publishing and co-editor of a series of texts about Canada and the Spanish Civil War. He lives in K’jipuktuk/Halifax.


Reviews

The Truth about Facts subtly and satisfyingly illuminates already existing connections in the seemingly far-flung.”Canadian Literature

“There is a solid tradition of poets taking up the alphabet itself as their point of attack. But I have a hard time thinking of anyone who has done so with as much gusto as Bart Vautour. Following the wisdom of his daughter, through whose eyes and ears the alphabet is encountered anew, Vautour tracks factual and fictional subjects out of anagrammatical accident, on through dictionaries, histories, lexicons, and archives—a Borgenian infinite library we spiral through, as ‘hard facts’ encrust the edges of the world’s ‘fake news.’ I want to call Vautour ‘the Glen Gould of poetry,’ and The Truth About Facts his unmatched alphabetical variations. There’s no jiggery-pokery here—just the worshipping of strange alphabetic gods. I am a convert. I believe every word of it.”—Stephen Collis, author of Once in Blockadia and DECOMP

“Fact: this ain’t your colonist schoolmarm’s New England Primer. In The Truth About Facts, Bart Vautour offers a poetic chrestomathy through which we may un/learn the language “of buoyancy in being.” Ebbs and flows of data, his/tories, and records mingle with inter/personal truths and untruths that gather their colours in an intimate orchestra of alphabetic movements. Yet here, nothing is ever sure, and that’s a fact: cold scientific exactness collides with the warmth of language’s poetic undoing to create a balmy fog of inconclusivity, empathy, and communitas. Under Vautour’s hand, the “y-axis breaks” … and in its space, the self, the other, the other’s others uprise. These are the facts and truths, and their implosions and undoings, that you want to sit with, savour, and, with childlike vigour, question everything you thought you already knew.”—Kate Siklosi, co-founding editor of Gap Riot Press

“What is a fact? What is a poem? While a reconciliation of the two might seem scholarly and ambitious, you’ll find nothing but friendly invitations in The Truth About Facts. On this meandering journey through an alphabet of facts, you’ll encounter dementors and characters born of anagrams on the more lighthearted routes, while darker paths lead to lying US Presidents and racist exclusionary labour policies. Capital-f Facts and aphoristic lyrics dot these pages, stepping stones of thought that Vautour hops deftly across. Each poem reveals a smart and thoughtful mind in motion, and there is as much playfulness here as there is necessary critique. If, like me, you find yourself randomly clicking through Wikipedia articles late into the night, you will love this delightful ramble through the facts.”—Sachiko Murakami, finalist for the Governor General’s Award for English-language poetry


Awards

  • Gerald Lampert Award 2020, Long-listed
  • Excerpts & Samples ×

    Facts about Allotheism

    Here are the facts

    as we know them:

    In the beginning

    there was more

    than the word.

    There are lots of words

    in the worship of

    strange gods.

    Olathe Slim was

    on the holiest lam,

    after he absconded

    with a coarse birretum.

    Mollie’s hat, as it was known

    among the impertinent.

    In a Mali hostel

    Olie met Elliot Hams

    and from there

    they loved

    in all directions.

    They loved not one

    more than the other.

    Not once

    did they think

    to call each other

    a rose.

    They saw the world

    and even hid for a

    short time in some of

    the most expensive

    Lima hotels.

    They remained

    in constant pilgrimage

    and devotionally directed

    by poetry and the vague

    theories of continental drift

    as sketched out

    by Arthur Holmes.

    Tail ends and cutting edges

    nourished their love differently,

    albeit in equal amounts.

    Very occasionally

    they’d send helots mail,

    hoping they’d join

    the cause of the

    in-between.

    And sometimes

    they’d send messages

    into the world anonymously

    to news outlets (in countries with

    state funding for the arts) via emails

    —loth they were to write—

    in a lame Lithos, which

    left hints of camping

    in California state parks.

    Their communiqués

    were clear: we mustn’t confuse

    allotheism with alloethism:

    facts and poetics are not

    differently sized bees

    performing different tasks.

    Without a doubt Elliot

    would have preferred Baskerville.

    But that would have been too plain

    and the wrong type of bee.

    Too trustworthy.

    They’re more irreverent than that.

    It’s not trust they are after

    when it comes to facts.

    Reader Reviews

    Details

    Dimensions:

    104 Pages
    8.0in * 5.0in * 0.25in
    12.1lb

    Published:

    November 01, 2019

    ISBN:

    9781988784373

    Book Subjects:

    POETRY / Canadian

    Featured In:

    All Books

    Language:

    eng

    eng

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