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Poetry Canadian

The Animal Library

by (author) Jason Camlot

Publisher
DC Books
Initial publish date
Nov 2000
Category
Canadian
  • Hardback

    ISBN
    9780919688643
    Publish Date
    Nov 2000
    List Price
    $29.95
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9780919688629
    Publish Date
    Nov 2000
    List Price
    $13.95
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9789196886247
    Publish Date
    Nov 2000
    List Price
    $13.95

Classroom Resources

Where to buy it

Out of print

This edition is not currently available in bookstores. Check your local library or search for used copies at Abebooks.

Description

The Animal Library marks the debut of a remarkable poet — a poet of the flesh, his own and that of the animals he has lived with all his life, whether real or imaginary. Jason Camlot's father was a furrier and he grew up in a world where, inevitably, "baby fur gets in your eyes" or in "your mouth." In dreams, the poet becomes a whale corpse "washed up/ on a very pale beach/ and hundreds of flies came,/ and people,/ to see the tusk,/ spun like coral glass." And as the boy grows up, images, at once curiously literal and yet surreal — images of being devoured or skinned alive — stay with him. The beauty of this collection is one of the mot juste, a concreteness and precision, coupled with a superb sense of rhythm.
— Marjorie Perloff

About the author

Jason Camlot is the author of three previous collections of poetry, The Debaucher (Insomniac Press, 2008), Attention All Typewriters (DC Books, 2005), and The Animal Library (DC Books, 2001). He co-edited the essay anthology Language Acts (Vehicule Press, 2007), about English-language poetry in Québec, and has done extensive research into sound recordings of 19th- and 20th-century poetry. Jason teaches Victorian literature, among other things, at Concordia University in Montreal. He edits the Punchy Poetry imprint for DC Books.

Jason Camlot's profile page

Editorial Reviews

"...Camlot's graphic exactness adds to the power of his vivid, animated images."
— Betty Goodwin
"...Camlot's style is rich and telling, taking us from smutty Chicago to ancient Greece, from the 19th century Decadents to modern biological polemics."
— Hour, 2001
"These poems are satisfyingly grisly and ornate, and funny in the sinister way that dreams are sometimes funny… Toe-curlingly delightful."
— Broken Pencil
"This work has Kafkaesque reverberations and a rich awareness of the evocative power of sight, sound and smell… and moves from the prehistoric to the present while displaying a strong sense of European myth and history intermingled with a heady eroticism."
— Rampike Magazine
"Rich in ideas and wit…unique and prodigious in its imagery."
—Books in Canada

“...Camlot’s graphic exactness adds to the power of his vivid, animated images.”

— Betty Goodwin

“...Camlot’s style is rich and telling, taking us from smutty Chicago to ancient Greece, from the 19th century Decadents to modern biological polemics.”

— Hour, 2001

“These poems are satisfyingly grisly and ornate, and funny in the sinister way that dreams are sometimes funny… Toe-curlingly delightful.”

– Broken Pencil

“This work has Kafkaesque reverberations and a rich awareness of the evocative power of sight, sound and smell… and moves from the prehistoric to the present while displaying a strong sense of European myth and history intermingled with a heady eroticism.”

— Rampike Magazine

“Rich in ideas and wit…unique and prodigious in its imagery.”

–Books in Canada