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Poetry Canadian

Fluttertongue 5

Everything Appears to Shine with Mossy Splendour

by (author) Steven Smith

Publisher
Turnstone Press
Initial publish date
Apr 2011
Category
Canadian
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9780888015273
    Publish Date
    Apr 2011
    List Price
    $11.99

Classroom Resources

Where to buy it

Description

Is he talking about botany or…hmmm…ahhh…well now. The very act of reading Steven Ross Smith’s fifth volume of his Fluttertongue series draws shock, secret smiles and out-loud exclamations from the most stoic, stuffedshirt readers of poetry. Rife and ribald, his disjunctive prose-poem forms contain stimulation for all five senses. Jumping off the page in explorations of joined oppositions, the richly worded poems reveal beyond-intimate experiences of the physical world, exposing snapshots of human experience and relationships with nature. Personal-impersonal juxtapositions, syntacticstructure and randomness appear here to express primal-scream poetry.

Each page sets a prose poem atop a sly and sensuous moss-like footer that unfolds at the bottom of each page, giving its own experience of winkand-nudge word play. The book becomes a distraction in itself, tempting the reader to peek ahead, disregarding proper book-reading etiquette.

With Smith’s irresistible word play and a deep and complex poetic sensibility, Fluttertongue 5 is a rich, rewarding and delightful read.

About the author

Steven Ross Smith is a multi-disciplinary sound and performance poet, writer of fiction, poetry, book reviews, and artist profiles. He has served as publisher/editor with Underwhich Editions, Business Manager of Grain magazine, and as Managing Editor with Banff Centre Press and editor of the online magazine Boulderpavement. He has been a Writer-In-Residence in a variety of long and short-term residencies, including the twelve-month terms at Saskatoon Public Library and Weyburn Public Library. Smith has been publishing literary work since the 1970s, appearing in one hundred periodicals and thirteen books, including one non-fiction title, two collections of short fiction, and ten poetry books. Smith's book Disarray: Fluttertongue 3: won the 2005 Saskatchewan Books Awards Book of the Year Award. The chapbook Pliny's Knickers, a collaboration between Smith, poet Hilary Clark and artist Betsy Rosenwald, won the 2006 bpNichol Chapbook Award. In 2008, he moved to Banff to become Director of Literary Arts at The Banff Centre, where he served until February 2014. Smith currently lives in Banff, Alberta. Connect with Smith at www.fluttertongue.ca or on Twitter @SonnyBoySmith.

Steven Smith's profile page

Editorial Reviews

poet and performance artist Steven Ross Smith records an ecstatic alertness to the world in the latest instalment of his multi-book project Fluttertongue 5: Everything Appears to Shine with Mossy Splendour

Everything gleams with possibility for Banff writer (Review Excerpt)

Blessed with a savvy eye and a sound ear, Steven Ross Smith turns verse with a sure hand. Each poem is a splendid meditation that makes brilliant abracadabra out of the bric-a-brac of everyday pleasures and perils. Smith names debts to Ashbery and Willis, but his prose lyrics are also Beat-ific, reminding one of Bob Dylan's Tarantula and Richard Brautigan's Trout Fishing in America. Sho nuf. Bottom line? Smith's poems are top-o-the-line. Hear: "Every day a new poet is discovered by a different reader who meets a resonant sensibility, through strange."-George Elliott Clarke, I & I

George Elliott Clarke Advance Praise for Fluttertongue 5

"...this is a deeply engaging work. A profound pleasure. Smith continues to surprise, delight, provoke."-- Eclectic Ruckus Blog

Eclectic Ruckus Blog

"[In Fluttertongue 5,] one word, sound or idea knocks into another like snooker balls as Smith self-consciously lets his words be words having fun, while also making serious commentary on the nature of human desire, domestic life and work, our weakness for war and money, and the sad sate of the natural world that often gets in the way of such weakness."-- The StarPhoenix

The StarPhoenix

Fluttertongue 5: everything appears to shine with mossy splendour is a bricoleur’s dark dreaming, a continuous act of dis/covery as the mind wanders out from its impetus, those phrases another poet wrote that pushed one reader to write on, out. Although, or perhaps because, each section moves in a deliberate & playful parataxis, a formal play that refuses any conventional narrative while sentence by sentence hooking the (writer’s & reader’s) mind into that narrative of poesis Kroetsch & Nichol have spoken of in reference to the long poem, this is a deeply engaging work. A profound pleasure. Smith continues to surprise, delight, provoke. Fluttertongue 5: everything appears to shine with mossy splendour, while definitely writerly comes across as definitely readerly too.

http://eclecticruckus.wordpress.com/2011/07/21/viscerebral-steven-ross-smiths-new-fluttertongue/

Eclectic Ruckus poetry blog

"[There is an] undergrowth that resides beneath the book's more covert desires. Language is illuminated in a spore-like fashion: poems grow within poems, words within words, and a new meaning takes hold."-- Winnipeg Free Press

Winnipeg Free Press

Smith's short prose narratives are woven through simple declarative statements and occasional interrogatives, but subverted by interruption and indeterminacy. Each word and tone is a precise stroke of the fluid present transforming into 'idea.' Life's lived-in moments - watching sparrows, sipping latte, listening to Etta James, agonizing over our violations to the natural and social environment. Read, re-read, re-heard, meanings and revelations form with luminous clarity. In this latest and richest book in Fluttertongue, his innovative serial project, Smith confirms that he, as much as any writer, perpetuates the legacy left by bpNichol and The Martyrology.-Gerry Shikatani, First Book, 3 Gardens of Anadalucia

Gerry Shikatani Advance Praise for Fluttertongue 5