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Midgic is a small community on the edge of New Brunswick’s Tantramar marshes, thought by historian William Francis Ganong to have been named for a Mi’kmaq descriptive for “a point of highland into a marsh.” In this new suite of poems, Douglas Lochhead displays the sure, grid-laying eye of the archeologist, mapping each small detail in his concise lyric shorthand. Like Lochhead’s High Marsh Road (1980) and Dykelands (1989), Midgic employs a method of repeated encounters with a specific place to reveal over time a rhythm and logic otherwise invisible in both the landscape and the visitant. Lochhead’s gift lies in his ability to amplify the truths of the greater world while speaking of a single place in whispers.
“Lochhead has that rare ability to write simply about ordinary things and yet provoke the reader to new insights and emotions.” Canadian Literature Review
“It’s as beautiful as the district it celebrates.” E.E. Cran, The New Brunswick Reader
Pages
7in * 4.75in * 0.25in
128gr
October 01, 2003
9781894031790
eng
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