Trouble Sleeping

By (author): Phil Hall

“If only my cousin had kept off me, kept out of me his brown fly-strop glue, his shot dog-eye cream. Afterwards, he would comb my hair to a wet Elvis point between my eyes and warn me what his wolves would do to me, and where I’d be sent, if I ever told.”

This experience is at the core of Phil Hall’s Trouble Sleeping. It is the source of bad dreams and also, paradoxically, the source of his crisp, luminous text. Trouble Sleeping makes visible the poetry of hopeful despair by remembering a poor working class family of Irish descent, living outside the margins of respectability at the edge of the Laurentian Shield in mid-Northern Ontario in the 1950s. This raw world is seen by a child who is a misfit in it (especially among its brutal, drunken males). That child will eventually come to speak for the plight of unregarded misfits in society at large. “Orthodontics is a class issue” to the writer looking back on a time when it never occurred to his parents that crooked teeth might be fixed – not that they could have afforded it. In Trouble Sleeping, working a variation on the Japanese form of haibun, Hall alternates prose passages with poems that reflect nightmarishly on the interwoven narratives.

AUTHOR

Phil Hall

Phil Hall is a writer, editor, and teacher. His first book, Eighteen Poems, was published in 1973. Among his many published titles are: Old Enemy Juice (1988); The Unsaid (1992); Hearthedral–A Folk-Hermetic (1996); An Oak Hunch (2005); White Porcupine (Book*hug, 2007); Killdeer (Book*hug, 2011; winner of the 75th Governor General’s Literary Award for Poetry and the Trillium Book Prize, and shortlisted for the Griffin Poetry Prize); Small Nouns Crying Faith (Book*hug, 2013); Guthrie Clothing: The Poetry of Phil Hall, a Selected Collage (2015); and My Banjo and Tiny Drawings (2015). Hall has taught writing at York University, Ryerson University, Seneca College, George Brown College, and elsewhere. Phil lives with his wife near Perth, Ontario.


Reviews

Trouble Sleeping is a tour de force … crafted and measured responses to the cruelty of daily life. The collection is marked by a restrained rage that threatens to erupt on every page.”–Ruth Panofsky, Quill and Quire

“Like many novels, Hall’s haibun happens as much in the interstices between pieces as it does in the writing itself. It requires a suspension of disbelief, a trust that the pieces will coalesce, and they do. The world portrayed in these poems — because even the ‘prose’ is really poetry — is harsh and beautiful.”–Crystal Bacon, The Antigonish Review

“Hall is no stranger to the GG poetry category. He was nominated in 2000 for his book Trouble Sleeping … He’s one of the most inventive, and least pretentious, poets we have. If he’s not a household name yet, he should be.”–Paul Vermeersch, The Globe and Mail


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Excerpts & Samples ×

“If only my cousin had kept off me, kept out of me his brown fly-strop glue, his shot dog-eye cream. Afterwards, he would comb my hair to a wet Elvis point between my eyes and warn me what his wolves would do to me, and where I’d be sent, if I ever told.”

This experience is at the core of Phil Hall’s Trouble Sleeping. It is the source of bad dreams and also, paradoxically, the source of his crisp, luminous text. Trouble Sleeping makes visible the poetry of hopeful despair by remembering a poor working class family of Irish descent, living outside the margins of respectability at the edge of the Laurentian Shield in mid-Northern Ontario in the 1950s. This raw world is seen by a child who is a misfit in it (especially among its brutal, drunken males). That child will eventually come to speak for the plight of unregarded misfits in society at large. “Orthodontics is a class issue” to the writer looking back on a time when it never occurred to his parents that crooked teeth might be fixed – not that they could have afforded it. In Trouble Sleeping, working a variation on the Japanese form of haibun, Hall alternates prose passages with poems that reflect nightmarishly on the interwoven narratives.

Reader Reviews

Details

Dimensions:

80 Pages
8.75in * 5.5in * 0.25in
0.353lb

Published:

October 16, 2000

Country of Publication:

CA

Publisher:

Brick Books

ISBN:

9781894078115

Book Subjects:

POETRY / Canadian

Featured In:

All Books

Language:

eng

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