Safety Razor by Emily Osborne

A debut poetry collection using lyricism and Old Norse translations

Image | Safety Razor by Emily Osborne

(Gordon Hill Press)

Safety Razor combines personal lyrics with translations from Old Norse, its taut poems running like high-wires between the poles of terror and joy, danger and safety, erudition and naivety. Mingling subjects as diverse as dinosaur bones and diacritical markers, Vikings and mothering, Safety Razor pits cultural and historical flotsam against the intimate and the academic. Be prepared for a voice that is both vulnerable and scientific as it explores the exploitation of Jumbo the Elephant, how a baby experiences a tornado, or a Viking demonstration of poetic prowess through vomit and blood. Every line in Osborne's sharp verse is like a "pin dipped in tobacco spit," something inked with precision and grit. (From Gordon Hill Press)
Emily Osborne's poetry, short fiction and Old Norse-to-English verse translations have appeared in journals and anthologies including The Literary Review of Canada and Barren Magazine. She is the author of the poetry chapbook Biometrical. In 2018, Osborne won The Malahat Review's Far Horizons Award for Poetry. Safety Razor is her debut poetry collection.