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Poems exploring the idea of home and the difficulties of a deeply ambiguous relationship to that word.
— At once wise and achingly at a loss, Ann Scowcroft’s The Truth of Houses is an elegant and honest debut collection. While very intimate — even startlingly intimate at times — the voices of these poems are constantly taking a step backward, wrestling for a measure of distance and perspective. Reading them, we eavesdrop on the uncovering of a personal vernacular that might allow the present to be better lived; we have the sense of overhearing a particular yet eerily familiar inner struggle — a struggle for insight, for an equanimity with which both narrator and fortunate reader might re-enter life anew.
All of which is to say: the houses aren’t fooled
the houses know the five truths
The truth of light: you will see before you understand
The truth of motion: escape is an illusion
The truth of trees: your busy life will dissolve into the soil
The truth of windows: what protects can also maim
The truth of peace:
despite all the other truths
knowing will come to you wearing one hundred faces
contain you as once you contained your
own blood
— from “The Truth of Houses”
” … The Truth of Houses unfolds, in subtle layers of meditation and observation, a rustic brand of maternal wisdom and grit … a poignant illustration of our impossible longings to find total security, whether that be in comfortable homes or in each other’s arms.”–Sonnet L’Abbe, The Globe and Mail
“Ann Scowcroft’s first collection of poems astounds with its dense writing, as if the author had been accumulating, constructing her vision long enough and could hold back no longer. Oddly mesmerizing in the imagery they provoke, these poems are at once intimate and universal.”–Jury Citation, Winner of the 2011 Concordia University First Book Prize
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104 Pages
8.75in * 6in * 0.405in
240lb
March 15, 2011
CA
9781926829678
eng
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