A note to US-based customers: All Lit Up is pausing print orders to the USA until further notice. Read more

A Brief History of the Short-Lived

By (author): Chris Hutchinson

In his third poetry collection, A Brief History of the Short-Lived, Chris Hutchinson brings the full force of his linguistic dexterity to bear on the elusive subject of literature itself.

With his restless intellectual curiosity tempered by a dash of witty self-deprecation, Hutchinson deftly manoeuvres through hallowed halls of academia with humour and grace.

Three stylistically distinct sections,”Imago,””A Brief History of the Short-Lived,” and “Serialist” are interwoven throughout the collection, showcasing the range of Hutchinson’s poetic ability. The “Brief History” poems explode from the page in densely allusive bursts of energy, clusters of images fired off at a rapid pace: “He is wearing a green felt / Fedora with an ostrich plume which bursts into flame the moment I drop / A three-sided coin into his outstretched flipper.” By contrast, the “Imago” and “Serialist” sections are quieter and more meditative, though no less inventive or rich in imagery: “Rhetoric is big business / as byzantine networks / replace its circle of friends.”

By turns gleefully irreverent, thoughtful and too clever for its own good, A Brief History of the Short-Lived defies description–it must be read to be believed.

AUTHOR

Chris Hutchinson

Chris Hutchinson was born in Montreal and has lived in Victoria, Edmonton, Vancouver and most recently Phoenix, Arizona. He now lives in Vancouver. His poems have been translated into Chinese and have appeared in numerous Canadian and U.S. publications. He is the author of the poetry collection, Unfamiliar Weather (Muses’ Company, 2005). Other People’s Lives is his second collection.

Reviews

One way to approach a book of poems is to read it as a collection of evocative lines. Take, for instance, “Then your thought becomes a paper flower/ Unfolded by an artless whim/ And crumpled up by worrying neuroses/ And planted in the heart of reason.” This is a pleasing passage, both rhythmically and intellectually: metaphor and sound working in tandem. An aesthetic akin to surrealism is at work in Hutchinson’s latest collection.–Paul Tyler, Arc Poetry Magazine

Awards

There are no awards found for this book.
Excerpts & Samples ×
In his third poetry collection, A Brief History of the Short-Lived, Chris Hutchinson brings the full force of his linguistic dexterity to bear on the elusive subject of literature itself.

With his restless intellectual curiosity tempered by a dash of witty self-deprecation, Hutchinson deftly manoeuvres through hallowed halls of academia with humour and grace.

Three stylistically distinct sections,”Imago,””A Brief History of the Short-Lived,” and “Serialist” are interwoven throughout the collection, showcasing the range of Hutchinson’s poetic ability. The “Brief History” poems explode from the page in densely allusive bursts of energy, clusters of images fired off at a rapid pace: “He is wearing a green felt / Fedora with an ostrich plume which bursts into flame the moment I drop / A three-sided coin into his outstretched flipper.” By contrast, the “Imago” and “Serialist” sections are quieter and more meditative, though no less inventive or rich in imagery: “Rhetoric is big business / as byzantine networks / replace its circle of friends.”

By turns gleefully irreverent, thoughtful and too clever for its own good, A Brief History of the Short-Lived defies description–it must be read to be believed.

Reader Reviews

Details

Dimensions:

96 Pages
8in * 5.5in * 0.25in
0.33lb

Published:

April 16, 2012

Publisher:

Nightwood Editions

ISBN:

9780889712669

Book Subjects:

POETRY / Canadian

Featured In:

All Books

Language:

eng

No author posts found.

Related Blog Posts

There are no posts with this book.