Bag of Gas by Murray Reiss
CBC Books | Posted: October 31, 2018 8:04 PM | Last Updated: November 1, 2018
2018 CBC Poetry Prize longlist
Murray Reiss has made the 2018 CBC Poetry Prize longlist for Bag of Gas.
About Murray
Born in Sarnia, Ont., Murray Reiss has lived on Salt Spring Island since 1979 with his wife, Karen, a ceramic sculptor. His first book, The Survival Rate of Butterflies in the Wild, won the 2014 Gerald Lampert Award and was runner-up for the Fred Cogswell Award. His second collection, Cemetery Compost, came out in 2016. A chapbook, Distance from the Locus, was published in 2005. Reiss also brings his words to life on the stage as a Climate Action Performance Poet and founding member of Salt Spring's Only Planet Cabaret.
Entry in five-ish words
Waves. Ripples. Intergenerational cross-cultural trauma.
The poem's source of inspiration
"The poem was inspired by coming across the quotation from Angela Rich — 'I won't stop sniffing gas because when I do I can see my brother' — that now serves as the poem's epigraph. My mind leapt from the plight of the young Innu children of Davis Inlet to my father — not as great a leap as you might first think. My father was the only one of his family not to have perished in a concentration camp in Poland. He was, as another poem describes him, "a second-hand survivor." I can only imagine — he never spoke of it — how he must have felt after receiving such devastating news. I can only imagine — and isn't that what poems are for — how, like the gas-sniffing youth of Davis Inlet, he must have yearned to join his departed brothers, no matter the cost."
First lines
"I won't stop sniffing gas because when I do I can see my brother."
– Angela Rich, Sheshatsiu, Davis Inlet
Such an obvious plan that if it occurred to Angela Rich,
sixteen at the time, it must have struck my father,
in his thirties in those months before I was born,
when the lantslaite knocked at his door
and tried to tell him,
shuffled their feet and pulled at their long grey beards
sixteen at the time, it must have struck my father,
in his thirties in those months before I was born,
when the lantslaite knocked at his door
and tried to tell him,
shuffled their feet and pulled at their long grey beards
About the 2018 CBC Poetry Prize
The winner of the 2018 CBC Poetry Prize will receive $6,000 from the Canada Council for the Arts, will have their work published on CBC Books and will have the opportunity to attend a writing residency at the Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity. Four finalists will each receive $1,000 from the Canada Council for the Arts and have their work published on CBC Books.