Synopses & Reviews
Shortlisted for the Trillium Book Award for Poetry (2013)
Shortlisted for the Gerard Lampert Award (2013)
Inspired largely by the poet's experiences as a young man working in the Saskatchewan oilfields, Mathew Henderson's The Lease explores masculinity and the roles morality, violence, and hard labor play in it. Equal parts character study, cultural documentary, and coming-of-age narrative, Henderson's poems make it clear that however we may try to stay apart from them, the stubborn and often unflattering realities of masculine culture persist, not just in isolated, dangerous environments like this, but in our very idea of what work is.
No mark survives this place: you too will yield
to unmemory. Give everything you are
in three-day pieces. Watch the gypsy iron
move, follow its commands.
Tend the rusted steel like a shepherd.
Shortlisted for the 2013 Gerald Lampert Award, presented by the League of Canadian Poets
Mathew Henderson lives in Toronto, Ontario, writes about the prairies, and teaches at Humber College. The Lease is his first collection of poetry.
Review
The Lease cuts into its primary subjects grease, technology, physical labor, alienated sex, mud, fear, profound loneliness like a welders oxyacetylene flame. [...] I've read more adept books of poetry than
The Lease in the past six months, with more self-conscious chaos and precision wordplay. But I've read none that I was more eager to run through again in my mind.
Dwight Garner, The New York Times
A sneakily brilliant, beautiful work
Writing that's meant to be read, like light through ice, hard and clear and true. Try not to shield your eyes. The Millions
'Henderson guides us through a hellish world of brutalized males and brutal violence, which he seems both repulsed by and attracted to. It's this dynamic that makes Henderson's poems extraordinary ... Anyone who cares about work and the ways it transforms workers must read this book.' - Rain Taxi
The tactile beauty of Mathew Hendersons poems feels physically earned, carried across hard distances. We want to stay close to this voice we half-know and these lines, never burdened but speech-weighted, so carefully set down. The poems extend with great honesty a tradition of writing about the kind of working life that might kill you now or in time. Whats drawn here are the unequal wages of hand and heart.
Michael Helm, author of Cities of Refuge
The scale of Hendersons almost hallucinatory rendering of work in Saskatchewans oilfields is as small as the moths that circle the flares and as cosmic as the industrys effects. The Lease crackles with perfectly pitched alarm at what human dominion does to our humanity.
Linda Besner, author of The Id Kid
The tactile beauty of Mathew Hendersons poems feels physically earned, carried across hard distances. We want to stay close to this voice we half-know and these lines, never burdened but speech-weighted, so carefully set down. The poems extend with great honesty a tradition of writing about the kind of working life that might kill you now or in time. Whats drawn here are the unequal wages of hand and heart.
Michael Helm, author of Cities of Refuge
The scale of Hendersons almost hallucinatory rendering of work in Saskatchewans oilfields is as small as the moths that circle the flares and as cosmic as the industrys effects. The Lease crackles with perfectly pitched alarm at what human dominion does to our humanity.
Linda Besner, author of The Id Kid
Synopsis
Debut collection of poems written in the sweat, blood, and grease of those who labour in the oilfields.
About the Author
Mathew Henderson: Mathew Henderson is a recent grad of the University of Guelph's MFA program. Originally from Prince Edward Island, he now lives in Toronto, writes about the prairies and teaches at Humber College.