The New Canon: An Anthology of Canadian Poetry

Edited by Carmine Starnino

[poetry]

The New Canon: An Anthology of Canadian Poetry offers readers a reliable, if often risk-taking, guide to the last two decades of contemporary Canadian poetry. In the first book to survey the territory since Dennis Lee's landmark The New Canadian Poets was published in 1985, critic and poet Carmine Starnino has collected fifty of the most interesting Canadian poets born between 1955 and 1975, many of whom have never made an appearance in a major anthology.

Selected from the lists of more than twenty presses, and serving up nearly two hundred poems, this indispensable volume attempts to identify an emerging openness towards form in Canadian poetry. Concentrating on poets who have launched innovative attacks on traditional verse modes, The New Canon will do much to challenge prevailing insularities and tastes. Also included is a long essay by Starnino that describes and explains the innovative tendencies of this exciting group.

Among the writers represented are Richard Sanger, Julie Bruck, David McGimpsey, Jeffery Donaldson, Bruce Taylor, Diana Brebner, Laura Lush, Christopher Patton, George Elliott Clarke, Stephanie Bolster, Steven Heighton, Sue Sinclair, Ken Babstock, Elise Partridge, David Manicom, David O'Meara, Karen Solie, Barbara Nickel, and Joe Denham.


Carmine Starnino is a poet, essayist, critic, and editor of Signal Editions. He is the author of A Lover's Quarrel, a book of criticism on Canadian poetry, and three critically acclaimed poetry collections, the most recent being With English Subtitles. His poetry has won the Canadian Authors Association Prize, the David McKeen Award, and the A.M. Klein Prize. Starnino lives in Montreal where he serves as associate editor for Books in Canada and Maisonneuve.


US RELEASE DATE: APRIL 2006


ISBN:  1-55065-208-7
Price: CDN $23.95
US $17.95
Illustrated: No Cover:  Trade Paper
Size: 6 x 9 No. of Pages: 260 In Print: Yes