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ISBN
921870-66-3
6 x 9
88 pp, $13.95
Poetry

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Green Man
By John DonlanFor
thousands of years the image of the Green Man — foliage sprouting from his mouth to
symbolize humanity's unity with the natural world — has survived in European
civilization. Invoking this spirit, John Donlan counsels: "Wear the earth as if it
were your skin." He writes of how "the wind's voice, translated through the
low/hiss of pine needles, says, 'You belong'." But the wisdom of the Green Man is not
easily won. Donlan's poems, each recording the date of its completion, and published in
the order in which they were written, constitute a kind of spiritual diary, a history and
science of feeling. The first half of the book, structured in quintets, chronicles the
struggle for self-understanding and personal growth. Destructive impulses insinuate
themselves when least expected: "One voice says, 'Watch your step' and one says
'Slip'." While seeking to embrace the ancient wisdom of the Green Man, Donlan knows
that we must confront the bleakness of modern life, and consequently the second half of
the volume is rooted in Vancouver's East Side, where "clearcuts metastasize into
neighbourhoods." Throughout, however, Donlan's imagery and cadenced language feeds
our "hunger/for the beauty of the world." Despite the holocaust being wreaked on
the natural world, Donlan's Green Man is written "against despair."
"There's a species of aesthetic poise
— we might call it musical intelligence — which comes about when discipline and surprise
are working, not just in combination, but each for the other. I think of John Donlan's
poems as wise acrobats, alive to the many weathers of the self but equally well tuned to
cityscape and landscape, performing athletic meditations inside a stillness they create
for themselves. In Green Man we have a collection by one of our finest poets
working at full stretch."
— Don McKay
A native of Baysville, in Ontario's Muskoka region, John
Donlan has previously published two highly acclaimed poetry collections: Domestic
Economy (Brick, 1990, repr. 1997) and Baysville (Anansi, 1993). He is a
reference librarian with the Vancouver Public Library and a poetry editor with Brick
Books. He has won numerous awards, with his poems and reviews appearing in leading
journals in Canada and the USA.
Visit his website for
more information.
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