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ECW Press Spring 2021 Trade

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  • Sales Rights

    For sale with exclusive rights in: WORLD
  • Supply Detail

    Distributor: Jaguar Book Group Availability: Available Expected Ship Date: Mar 23, 2021 On Sale Date: Apr 13, 2021 Carton Quantity: 65 $19.95 CAD
  • Supply Detail

    Distributor: BTPS Availability: Available Expected Ship Date: Mar 23, 2021 On Sale Date: Apr 13, 2021 Carton Quantity: 65 $19.95 USD
  • Catalogues

Is This Scary?
Poems
By (author): Jacob Scheier
Jacob Scheier

Imprint:

ECW Press - Toronto

ISBN:

9781770416055

Product Form:

Paperback

Form detail:

Trade
Paperback , Trade
English

Audience:

General Trade
Apr 13, 2021
$19.95 CAD
Active

Dimensions:

8.5in x 5.5 x 0.3 in | 0.32 lb

Page Count:

88 pages
ECW Press
POETRY / Canadian
Poetry
Toronto
  • Short Description
Scheier’s new poetry collection centres landscapes of suffering, including depression and anxiety, chronic physical ailment, and rare neurological malady, rejecting pathologizing or triumphant narratives and instead engaging pain and exile as a chronic state of being that isn’t intended to be resolved, but rather explored, expressed, and honored.

A challenging exploration of mental illness and disability from Governor General’s Award winner Jacob Scheier.

Is This Scary? digs deep into internal landscapes of suffering, including depression and anxiety, chronic physical ailment, and rare neurological malady. With its many eccentric songs and odes to medications and medical procedures, this book is full of both levity and unapologetic lament. Pushing back against societal stigma, Is This Scary? unflinchingly addresses experiences of psychiatric institutionalization and suicidality, without either romanticizing or pathologizing them. Scheier rejects much of the mainstream cultural views of mental illness, subverting the biochemical model by emphasizing the radical subjectivity of mental suffering. While the poems render the difficulty of communicating pain to others, they defiantly celebrate its expression and evocation through visceral lyricism.

Scheier also challenges our culture’s desire to be inspired by stories of “triumphing” over illness and disability. Nothing is overcome here, the journey from illness to wellness is one of narrative and aesthetic disruption. The perpetually incomplete search for self and home is ultimately at the heart of this book: along with being a person with disabilities, the poet-speaker identifies as a Diaspora-Jew, engaging exile as a chronic state of being that isn’t intended to be resolved, but rather explored, expressed, and honored.


Ode to Prednisone

Herr Pill! You murder sleep.
Eugenicist Cortisol, re-make me—
ox-strong, moon-faced, onioned-skin.
Hugs are dangerous.
Performance-enhancing drug for poets—
you triple feelings. Elegies for the late train & spilled milk.
Anxiety is Everything.
Threatened by the light that brightens the dark.
Dread tolerates Ativan.
Faustian Chemical, you resurrect myths
like Lazarus. He was never the same.
Charon-ian Steroid,
I’ve been to that shore the dead clamour for.

Sales and Market Bullets



  • More to Keep Us Warm, Scheier’s debut poetry collection, was the winner of the 2008 Governor General’s Award for English poetry.

  • Jacob Scheier is an award-winning journalist whose articles and essays have been published in the Globe and Mail, NOW Magazine, Brick, and more.

  • “This slim volume is packed with rich, complex, powerful poems about a wide variety of subjects. All are worthy of generous time to read and savor them, letting the chains of words roll around in one’s mind or off one’s tongue. This will be a poetry lover’s favorite.” — The Sacramento Book Review on Letter from Brooklyn

  • More to Keep Us Warm showcases his witty and self-reflexive handling of themes such as war, death, love, and religion … Scheier’s deft shifts in tone complicate what could easily turn into banal lyrical confessions but which, here, become provocative and ethical conundrums that force the reader to reevaluate certain assumptions.” — Canadian Literature


Publishing Diverse Voices



  • Author: Diaspora-Jew, #ownvoices

  • Content: Disability, mental illness


Audience



  • Contemporary poetry readers

  • CanLit poetry crowd and reviewers

Promotional Plans



  • Early review copies to book and library trade publications, and literary journals

  • Feature on National Poetry Month newsletter

  • Virtual poetry book tour through various reading series

  • Social media promotion using excerpts and cover art

Jacob Scheier is a Toronto-based poet, essayist, and journalist. He is the author of two previous poetry collections, including the Governor General’s Award–winning more to More to Keep Us Warm (ECW, 2007). His poems, articles, and essays have appeared in journals, magazines, and anthologies across North America.

“Sharp, insightful and often acerbically funny … This is work that’s both witty and affecting.” — Toronto Star

“Jacob Scheier’s poetry yanks you back to the septic-antiseptic psych ward, the dissociation of drowning in suicidality, the mad-scientist feeling of psychotropic medication. It reminds you how vital it is to be understood, even when enduring what's impossible to convey.” — Anna Mehler Paperny, author of Hello I Want to Die Please Fix Me

“Jacob Scheier’s poetic voice has matured into a contemplative, piercing one that makes distinctions with a real difference … Scheier’s diagnoses — both physical and mental in the Descartian binary — become unified, beautiful songs in this book of poems that tries to differentiate what it sees so precisely and, after coming up against the limits of language, the book presses on, describing the process of piecing together what is and can be known. ” — Shane Neilson, poet and author of New Brunswick and Dysphoria

“Scheier’s writing is honest, fierce, self-critical — and yet because the poet’s vision is large, he finds compassion for himself and for others. A powerful collection.” — James Arthur, author of The Suicide’s Son

“The poems combine the observational, the blunt, and occasionally the explicit in an episodic narrative, capturing the absurd, the mundane, and everything in between. If anything can emulate the enduring effects of poor mental health, it’s the contents of this book about mental health.” — Rain Taxi Review of Books

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