Common Place
- Publisher
- Coach House Books
- Initial publish date
- Apr 2017
- Category
- Women Authors, Canadian, General
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9781552453469
- Publish Date
- Apr 2017
- List Price
- $18.95
-
eBook
- ISBN
- 9781770565135
- Publish Date
- Apr 2017
- List Price
- $11.95
Classroom Resources
Where to buy it
Description
Common Place explores the stories of shifting, resilient bodies and landscapes bound by systems of capital and power. From thin threads of text messages across borders to encounters with strangers in the crush of rush-hour transit, Sarah Pinder names our most private and public moments of seeing and being seen. With considered, quiet urgency, this poem witnesses our ambiguous, aching present and looks towards what comes next.
‘Watch for theplaces where Pinder goes for the imperative: like the book as a whole, these commands are generous, beautiful, and difficult lifelines thrown from a fellow survivor of the present.’
– Jennifer Nelson, author of Aim at the Centaur Stealing Your Wife
‘Common Place feels like the logbook of a survivor, one that shows how the intimate and the idiosyncratic persist within the post-capitalist technosphere. A tatteredrecord keeping, Common Place is friend of the abject landscape, “home of the lesser, lowercase subject.�* Grasp its compassionate disposition, and this fragmentary poem reveals the affective centre of its ingeniously dissociative fabric.’
– Sue Sinclair, author of Heaven’s Thieves
About the author
Sarah Pinder was born in Sault Ste Marie. Her poetry has appeared in various literary journals and small magazines, as well as the anthology, She's Shameless. Her work has also been performed and displayed in Canada and abroad. She lives in Toronto. Cutting Room is her first poetry collection.
Editorial Reviews
‘If you have ever found yourself thinking about how societal norms and the constraints of late capitalism affect human connection, Sarah Pinder’s Common Place will provide a moving (in both senses) playground for your thoughts. Pinder layers metaphors so securely the poems can feel like ideograms that both summon strange conceptual complexes and enliven familiar ones. The juxtapositions sometimes masquerade as traditional imagism; but they suggest that theircomplex alignments are cosmic, the temporary but true alignments of human rather than celestial spheres. Just when the layering gets most intense, the erotic other appears, offering an even more dangerous transcendence. Watch for the poems where Pinder goes for the imperative: like the book as a whole, these commands are generous, beautiful, and difficult lifelines thrown from a fellow survivor of the present.’
– Jennifer Nelson, author of Aim at the Centaur Stealing Your Wife