 |
The
Emerald Hour
RICHARD STEVENSON & ELLEN MCARTHUR
In The Emerald
Hour, poet Richard Stevenson returns to the Japanese forms
of haiku and tanka, seemingly the simplest yet most precise of
poetic forms. This is his third book of Japanese forms published
by Ekstasis Editions. In the first of the series, Hot Flashes,
explored Stevenson’s experience of living and teaching in
Africa, using haiku to capture the essence of that colourful world.
In A Charm of Finches the poet returned home to Alberta,
a land more familiar but no less exotic when viewed through the
lens of haiku. Now in The Emerald Hour Richard Stevenson
focuses clearly on nature, the traditional subject of Japanese
forms. From settings such as idyllic Henderson Lake, shown in
evocative photographs by Ellen McArthur, to interior British Columbia
and hometown of Lethbridge, Stevenson, offers monuments to moments,
even Basho would enjoy.
Stevenson
is adept at making his own poetic windows, framing experience
and impression with a feel for how words sound and images might
be perceived… His own often off-kilter takes on things are
permeated with a gently rueful sense of humour.
Valerie Warder, NeWest Review
Richard Stevenson
has become a charter member of the Great Poetry Orchestra, playing
with the likes of Langston Hughes, Amiri Bakara, Corso, Ferlinghetti,
and Frank O’Hara. It’s illustrious company to be sure,
but Live Evil is that good.
Doug Beardsley, Quill and Quire
Ellen McArthur lives
in Lethbridge, Alberta, where she draws in pen and ink and photographs
people, cityscapes, landscapes, etc. Her other passions include
cooking, hiking, reading, family and friends.
Richard Stevenson lives and teaches in Lethbridge, Alberta. His
other Ekstasis Editions titles are From The Mouths of Angels,
Flying Coffins, Nothing Definite Yeti, Hot Flashes, A Charm of
Finches and Bye Bye Blackbird. |
|