A thin fire runs through me by Kim Trainor 

A collection of short poems about the small and mundane amid social and ecological disorder

Image | A thin fire runs through me by Kim Trainor 

Caption: A thin fire runs through me is a book by Kim Trainor. (Goose Lane Editions)

In A thin fire runs through me, Kim Trainor interrogates what it means to exist, to navigate the quotidian amidst the constant drip-feed of political and ecological disasters.
Written over an intense nine-month period in 2016 and 2017 amidst the stresses of heartbreak, depression, and the progression of a new love, Trainor's exquisite sequence of short poems offers meditations on different hexagrams in the I Ching, or Book of Changes. Incorporating fragments from reportage on current events, Jewish liturgy, and lyric poetics, she latches her readers to the present while acknowledging the inescapable presence of the past.
A thin fire runs through me grapples with Trainor's own personal circumstance while contemporaneously documenting the tenor of our times, suggesting that "We peer into other lives; we absorb words, headlines, violent events. We see and we don't see. These scraps are unintegrated, unintegratable, yet we carry them." (From Goose Lane Editions)
Kim Trainor is the author of the poetry collections Karotype and Ledi. Her poems have won the Fiddlehead's Ralph Gustafson Prize, the Malahat Review Long Poem Prize, the Great Blue Heron Prize. Her poem, Desolation, made the 2019 CBC Poetry Prize longlist. She lives in Vancouver