Biography & Autobiography Literary
Six Impossible Things Before Breakfast
Taking poetry public across Canada
- Publisher
- Emdash Publishing
- Initial publish date
- Nov 2006
- Category
- Literary
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9780978018214
- Publish Date
- Nov 2006
- List Price
- $14.95
Classroom Resources
Where to buy it
Description
Wendy Morton has probably done more to bring poetry and publicity together than any other living Canadian. Since 2001, she has relentlessly taken poetry out of bookstores and coffeeshops, out onto the streeteven into the air!bringing corporate sponsors, poets and audiences together in new and exciting ways.
Including fourteen complete poems by Morton, the memoir outlines her journey from private eye to poet to WestJet's Poet of the Skies and DaimlerChryslers Poet of the Road, along with other ways Morton has taken poetry public all across Canada. This accessible and exciting memoir is a journey into believing the impossible, and encourages dreamers of all sorts to make positive change based on flights of fancy.
About the author
Wendy Morton, an insurance investigator for the past twenty-three years and a Victoria, British Columbia native, has a knack for ‘turning her poetry into currency’. After being stopped by a cop for speeding, Morton read him a poem and managed to get out of a ticket, which convinced her of the power of poetry. From there, Morton called WestJet Airlines and asked them if she could read and write poetry for passengers before and in exchange for flights; WestJet agreed making her its ‘Poet of the Skies’. Inspired by the ordinary and the poetry of Patrick Lane, Wendy Morton is able to successfully blend her past experiences as a private investigator into her poetry. Host of Mocambopo – a weekly poetry venue in Victoria, British Columbia, Morton published her first book of poetry, Private Eye, in 2001 as well as two other books of poetry, Undercover and Shadowcatcher, and a memoir entitled 6 Impossible Things Before Breakfast. Morton’s Private Eye has been praised for its ”intimate and evocative poetry that undoes the myth of the hard-boiled investigator, bringing the focus of her own ‘private eye’ a wish for grace“ (Tanis MacDonald – Antigonish Review). Patrick Lane also notes how ”It’s wonderful to have watched Wendy Morton over the years as she has developed her fine gift for poetry“.