Synopses & Reviews
Dumpster fires outside discount stores and rotting whale carcasses; optical illusions and memento moriall coming to you direct, / by way of this Rube Goldberg machine.”
Failure to Thrive zigzags through excess, taking in the big picture through the lens of a pinhole camera. These poems ask us to lean into our senses, to spend time loitering, slipping coins into attentions slots, / anticipating the next big pay-off.”
Hip and cerebral, this witty collection is as quick to make fun of itself as it is to turn its humour outward, where false historians have free rein, answers come in the form of questions, and the apocalypse seems like a good time to knit a sweater. Suzannah Showlers debut shows us how a failing world can be the site of aesthetic renewal rather than decline.
Review
"Cerebral but musical, the thinking lateral but still propulsive, Showlers debut finds her skepticism field tested without turning into cynicism"
National Post"Tight, poignant and accessible." Maisonneuve
Synopsis
Poetry of ambivalence, humour, and doubt that belies a kind of optimism Dumpster fires outside discount stores and rotting whale carcasses; optical illusions and memento mori--all "coming to you direct, / by way of this Rube Goldberg machine." Failure to Thrive zigzags through excess, taking in the big picture through the lens of a pinhole camera. These poems ask us to lean into our senses, to "spend time loitering, slipping coins into attention's slots, / anticipating the next big pay-off." Hip and cerebral, this witty collection is as quick to make fun of itself as it is to turn its humour outward, where false historians have free rein, answers come in the form of questions, and the apocalypse seems like a good time to knit a sweater. Suzannah Showler's debut shows us how a failing world can be the site of aesthetic renewal rather than decline.
About the Author
Suzannah Showler holds an MA in Creative Writing from the University of Toronto. Her writing has appeared in The Walrus, Hazlitt, and The Puritan, and she was the winner of the 2012 Matrix LitPOP Award for Poetry, and a finalist for the 2013 Bronwen Wallace Award for Emerging Writers.