Killarnoe: Poems

Killarnoe: Poems

by Sonnet L'Abbe
Killarnoe: Poems

Killarnoe: Poems

by Sonnet L'Abbe

Paperback

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Overview

With its razzle-dazzle wordplay and kaleidoscope of subjects, Sonnet L’Abbé’s second collection of poems is a tour-de-force. L’Abbé invents her own unique poetics, coupling a glittering variety of patterns with tumbling rhythms and rhymes. And with this refreshed language, she reconsiders all the rules for twenty-first-century life. The poems work like a whirlwind, ranging from the intimacy of infancy to the shock of whole civilizations razed by war, and are infused with a political undertone that reveals a child’s emerging understanding of identity, of specific citizenship, of bodies physical and psychological, of language, imagination, and dream. Whether funny or funky, candid or subtle, amused and ironic or stunned in fright, the poems are guided by a fierce intelligence that never oversimplifies the world. Killarnoe, the poet tells us, “is a place I invented right now. I just built it from my head.” And in its reconsideration of what it means to be, Killarnoe is fascinating, charged, and inspired.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780771006777
Publisher: McClelland & Stewart
Publication date: 04/10/2007
Pages: 112
Product dimensions: 5.30(w) x 8.40(h) x 0.40(d)

About the Author

Sonnet L’Abbé is a Toronto-born writer of French-Canadian and Guyanese descent. She is the author of two collections of poetry, A Strange Relief and, most recently, Killarnoe. Her work has been internationally published and anthologized. In 2000, she won the Bronwen Wallace Memorial Award for most promising writer under 35. L’Abbé teaches writing at the University of Toronto’s School of Continuing Studies and reviews poetry for the Globe and Mail.

Read an Excerpt

OH

(((((o)))))

this o is my throat this o is my oh yeah this o is my really this o is my credulousness

((((o))))

this o is my soundful closed this o is my politeness this o is my mask this o is my feigned interest

(((o)))

this o is my I see this o is the shared place this o is my sympathy this o is my mistake

((o))

this o is my aha this o is my incredulousness this o is my startling backward this o is our otherness

(o)

this o is just o this o is symbolic sound this o is the presence of nothing this o is common ground

o

this o is my lips this o is my gentle kiss this o is my suckling o my greedy tenderness

oh uh-oh oh


A Word about the Poem by Sonnet L’Abbe
One of the interests I explore in Killarnoe is the unspoken relationship of phonemes (basic units of sound in language, like “ah,” or “sh,” or “uh”) to meaning. There’s an intuitive connection between the feeling elicited in the body when pronouncing a word and its signification. For example, the pristine sound of “ee” suggests a clean, free motion or a scream, while the hollow sound of “oh” suggests something lower, something whole and orblike.

I’m also interested in how these sounds get coded culturally, in what “sounds foreign” to Canadian ears. Where bazaars are common, names with “z” aren’t bizarre, but what does it mean to be named Aziz or Zalena here?


How the Poem Works by Margaret Christakos
Living in parentheses is resisted through utterance, on the wing’s highest heart and at language’s most inner pitches, so that the reverberations of that tiniest of bon mots signifies the radiance of the self. L’Abbe’s incantatory repetition and melodic optimism complete a notative poetics of private thought, of public comeback, and of identity inscription. Greedy, and tender, like the mouth itself.

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