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Lost Cafeteria, TheLost Cafeteria, The

Lost Cafeteria, The

By None

Current price: $8.69
Original price: $9.99
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Lost Cafeteria, The

By None

Lost Cafeteria, The

Current price: $8.69
Original price: $9.99
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Size: Kobo eBook

Visit retailer's website
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Indigo
Taking cues from the 20th century life writing of Robin Blaser, Frank O''Hara, William Everson, Sylvia Plath and Alden Nowlan, The Lost Cafeteria is a stylistically shapeshifting bildungsroman in verse set between the author''s evangelical upbringing and peripatetic adulthood. Exploring the shape of the "I-within-history," Ferguson mixes confessional lyric poetry with experimental détournements of advertising and human resources ideolects to visit (and revisit) themes of labour, family (biological and chosen), class, travel, religion, and the meanings of the word ''home.'' The Lost Cafeteria traces the poet''s development through "the first-world hinterlands" of Canada not in temporal but spatial terms, circling both the quotidian and singular events of a life. From the fruit orchards of interior British Columbia to social housing high-rises in downtown Winnipeg, from the expanses of the world''s megacities to the parochialisms of a small-town, post-industrial childhood to the history-laden fieldscapes of Merry Olde England, Joel Robert Ferguson''s debut collection of poems asks, "is it possible to separate nostalgia from regression?"
Taking cues from the 20th century life writing of Robin Blaser, Frank O''Hara, William Everson, Sylvia Plath and Alden Nowlan, The Lost Cafeteria is a stylistically shapeshifting bildungsroman in verse set between the author''s evangelical upbringing and peripatetic adulthood. Exploring the shape of the "I-within-history," Ferguson mixes confessional lyric poetry with experimental détournements of advertising and human resources ideolects to visit (and revisit) themes of labour, family (biological and chosen), class, travel, religion, and the meanings of the word ''home.'' The Lost Cafeteria traces the poet''s development through "the first-world hinterlands" of Canada not in temporal but spatial terms, circling both the quotidian and singular events of a life. From the fruit orchards of interior British Columbia to social housing high-rises in downtown Winnipeg, from the expanses of the world''s megacities to the parochialisms of a small-town, post-industrial childhood to the history-laden fieldscapes of Merry Olde England, Joel Robert Ferguson''s debut collection of poems asks, "is it possible to separate nostalgia from regression?"

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