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ECW Press Fall 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: Aug 31, 2021 On Sale Date: Sep 21, 2021 Carton Quantity: 71 $19.95 CAD
  • Supply Detail

    Distributor: BTPS Availability: Available Expected Ship Date: Aug 31, 2021 On Sale Date: Sep 21, 2021 Carton Quantity: 71 $19.95 USD
  • Catalogues

Broken Dawn Blessings
Poems
By (author): Adam Sol
Adam Sol

Imprint:

a misFit book - Toronto

ISBN:

9781770416062

Product Form:

Paperback

Form detail:

Trade
Paperback , Trade
English

Audience:

General Trade
Sep 21, 2021
$19.95 CAD
Active

Dimensions:

8.5in x 5.5 x 0.27 in | 0.33 lb

Page Count:

80 pages
ECW Press
a misFit book
POETRY / General
Poetry
 
Raymond Souster Award 2022, Short-listed Derek Walcott Prize for Poetry 2021, Short-listed Canadian Jewish Literary Award 2022, Winner
  • Short Description
Trillium Book Award–winning poet Adam Sol’s newest collection of contemporary poetry. A collection of poems, loosely linked to the traditional Jewish morning prayers, the Birkhot haShachar, that try to find moments of blessing in the midst of personal and public pain, shame, and worry.

Trillium Book Award–winning poet Adam Sol’s newest collection is made up of poems that are loosely linked to the traditional Jewish morning prayers, the Birkhot haShachar, which try to find moments of blessing in the midst of personal and public pain, shame, and worry

How do we respond to others’ pain, both the pain of those we love and the larger global pain of those we don’t know? In a religious context, a witness can offer blessing when those in the midst of suffering cannot. Taking on the responsibility of blessing, then, is a way to shoulder that burden for the sufferer. This presupposes the idea that blessing is a necessity — which may be a point up for debate.

In the context of his wife’s recovery from surgery, and with civic violence prevalent in his city, the speaker of these poems leans on the structure of the Birkhot haShachar (dawn blessings) to carve out space for empathy, complaint, and occasional flashes of wonder. These poems showcase Sol’s trademark blend of humor and lyric virtuosity, and display his familiarity with Jewish texts and traditions, but add a new intimacy and urgency that break new ground for one of Canada’s most respected poets. It is his most risky and most accomplished collection to date.

Sales and Market Bullets



  • “Sol deserves to be read widely and freely; his humble witness to the simple art of reading may be this book’s most important gift. Libraries should have multiple copies.” — Library Journal, starred review of How a Poem Moves

  • His first collection, Crowd of Sounds, won Ontario’s Trillium Award for Poetry in 2004. His other collections have been shortlisted for the Raymond Souster Award and the Housatonic Book Award.

  • Sol’s collection covers contemporary issues such as cancer and treatment, civil unrest, police brutality, and the Black Lives Matter movement.

  • Sol introduces Hebrew text in this collection and makes connections to Jewish texts and traditions.


Audience



  • Poetry writers and readers

  • Members of the Jewish community

  • Fans of Adam Sol


Adam Sol has published four previous books of poetry, and one collection of essays, How a Poem Moves: A Field Guide for Readers of Poetry. He is the Coordinator of the Creative Expression & Society Program at the University of Toronto’s Victoria College. He lives in Toronto, Ontario

“This vulnerable, heartbreaking, witty, kind, sometimes angry, and always honest book masterfully and generously intertwines private and public concerns. As his beloved ‘drifts from room to room,’ recovering from cancer surgery, the speaker goes deeper into his own mind, to find poems that do the necessary work of clarifying our complexities. This book is a treasure for all of us as we struggle and love.” — Matthew Zapruder, author of Why Poetry and Father’s Day

“In your hand is a manifest of wrecked words haunting a city’s fratricidal concerns. What is true of impermanence and grief in these dawns are lucid doors that aim to breach the need of a world wrinkled by violence and fear. But, also, here is awe.” — Canisia Lubrin, winner of the Windham Campbell and Griffin Poetry Prizes and author of The Dyzgraphxst

“Through the framework of a beloved’s illness and a city’s violence, these poems meet head-on forces both private and public that threaten vitality and well-being. They are offerings at the doorway of pain, insights of ferocious tenderness given with committed attention to the extraordinary and the everyday. Deeply felt and rendered with care, Adam Sol’s poem-blessings are honest, risky, and necessary.” — Raymond Souster Award shortlist announcement

“This is a masterful work searching personal and public pain and moments of blessing, joy, and wonder. It showcases Adam Sol’s deep understanding of Jewish traditions and culture while its lyric virtuosity connects us in an appreciation of our shared humanity. With this volume, he again proves himself to be an important voice in Canada’s literary scene and one of its most significant poets.” — Canadian Jewish Literary Awards winner announcement

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