TreeTalk
CBC Books | | Posted: September 8, 2020 10:28 PM | Last Updated: December 9, 2020
Ariel Gordon
During the heatwave of July 2017, Ariel Gordon spent two days sitting on the patio of downtown Winnipeg's Tallest Poppy, writing snippets of poems which she hung from the boulevard tree using paper and string. Passersby were invited to TreeTalk too — their secrets / one-liners / meditations / haiku were also hung from the tree. By the end of the weekend, the elm had a second temporary canopy of leaves: 234 poems, 111 written by Gordon, 107 written by passersby, and 16 from other sources.
Gordon has assembled all these voices into a long/found poem that asks: what does it mean to live in the urban forest? What does it mean to be in relationship with each other but also with the more-than-human? The book also includes pen and ink illustrations by Winnipeg artist Natalie Baird. (From At Bay Press)
Ariel Gordon is a poet from Winnipeg. She is also the author of the nonfiction bookTreed and was a co-editor on the anthology Gush.
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