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Poetry Canadian

Love and Savagery

by (author) Des Walsh

Publisher
Talonbooks
Initial publish date
May 2009
Category
Canadian
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9780889225992
    Publish Date
    May 2009
    List Price
    $16.95

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Description

This book of poems is a sustained adoration of the beloved which recalls the work of Dante—what the Vita Nuova might have been had Dante lived on the bare watered rock of Newfoundland, rather than in the ermine-cloaked decadence of Florence. The unnamed Irish woman of this collection, “the complicated jewel of the Burin Peninsula,” leads the narrator through the streets of St. John’s and the seemingly impenetrable evergreen thickets of Ireland on a spiritual odyssey of love and savagery. Unlike its model however, this book also occasionally provides the reader with moments of breathtakingly comic relief.

Made into a $6.5-million feature film (released fall 2009) by Montreal-born John N. Smith, (who also helmed the television seriesThe Englishman’s Boy and Random Passage), and set in 1968, the movie’s visual and dramatic interpretation of Love and Savagery is a lyrical story of an impossible love. Geologist and poet Michael McCarthy (played by Newfoundland native Allan Hawco) travels from his native Newfoundland to the west coast of Ireland to study the intricate and stunning landscape of the Burren. The beauty Michael encounters there is Kathleen O’Connell (played by Irish actress Sarah Greene), and although she is about to dedicate her life to the Church, Kathleen is inescapably drawn to Michael. In a community torn between its traditional roots and its aspirations for the future, the growing affection between the young couple is deeply unsettling and forces the woman to face a seemingly impossible choice.

About the author

Desmond Walsh is a veritable cultural icon in Newfoundland, with six books of poetry published, including the acclaimed Love and Savagery, which was adapted for a motion picture by Morag Films in 2009. Talonbooks released the second edition of Love and Savagery concurrent with the film’s release. Walsh is also a noted screenwriter, playwright and musician. He was the 2001 and 2003 playwright-in-residence at the Playwright’s Workshop in Montreal and at Memorial University’s Grenfell College in Corner Brook, respectively. He also scripted the mini-series adaptation of Bernice Morgan’s Random Passage and Waiting for Time, which aired on the CBC in 2002, commenting that: “Morgan’s works are sacred material because they are, finally, our story.” Along with John Smith and Sam Grana, he co-wrote the intensely popular and critically acclaimed miniseries The Boys of St. Vincent. Having encountered the public education system in Placentia and St. John’s, he left school in grade ten, famously claiming it did nothing for him. His awards include a Gemini, a New York Festival Award, Italy’s Umbria Fiction Award, and Best Series (Cannes International TV Festival), all for co-writing The Boys of St. Vincent. Walsh currently divides his time between New Bonaventure, Trinity Bay and St. John’s.

Des Walsh's profile page

Editorial Reviews

“A collection to be read and re-read, pondered and savoured.”
Newfoundland Herald