Glass Float

Jane Munro

Image | Glass Float Cover

(Brick Books)

Waves carried a glass float — designed to hold up a fishing net — across the Pacific. Beached it safely. Someone's breath is inside it.
In Glass Float, her seventh collection, award-winning poet Jane Munro considers the widening of horizons that border and shape our lives, the familiarity and mystery of conscious experience and the deepening awareness that comes with a dedicated practice such as yoga.
This book is about connections: mind and body; self and others; physical and metaphysical; art and nature; west and east, north and south. In "Convexities," the book's opening poem, Munro quotes the grandfather who taught her to paint: "art is suggestion; art is not representation." No concavities, he said. Only the "little hummocks" that her pencil outlined as she did contour drawings.
Munro's deft suggestion, her tracing of convexities, conveys underlying complexities, not by explication but by looking with eyes and heart open to where mysteries almost surface. (From Brick Books)
Jane Munro is the author of six poetry collections, including Point No Point, Active Pass and Blue Sonoma, which won the 2015 Griffin Poetry Prize.