Intruder
Bardia Sinaee
Availability:
Ebook in format. Available for immediate download after we receive your order
Ebook in format. Available for immediate download after we receive your order
Publisher:
House of Anansi Press Inc
House of Anansi Press Inc
DRM:
Open - No Protection
Open - No Protection
Publication Year:
2021
2021
ISBN-13:
9781487009205
Description:
<p>Winner of the Trillium Book Award for Poetry</p>
<p><strong>In <em>Intruder</em>, acclaimed poet Bardia Sinaee explores with vivid and precise language themes of encroachment in contemporary life.</strong></p>
<p>Bemused and droll, paranoid and demagogic, Sinaee’s much-anticipated debut collection presents a world beset by precarity, illness, and human sprawl. Anxiety, hospitalization, and body paranoia recur in the poems’ imagery — Sinaee went through two-and-a-half years of chemotherapy in his mid-twenties, documented in the vertiginous multipart prose poem “Twelve Storeys” — making <em>Intruder</em> a book that seems especially timely, notably in the dreamlike, minimalist sequence “Half-Life,” written during the lockdown in Toronto in spring 2020.</p>
<p>Progressing from plain-spoken dispatches about city life to lucid nightmares of the calamities of history, the poems in <em>Intruder</em> ultimately grapple with, and even embrace, the daily undertaking of living through whatever the hell it is we’re living through.</p>
<p><strong>In <em>Intruder</em>, acclaimed poet Bardia Sinaee explores with vivid and precise language themes of encroachment in contemporary life.</strong></p>
<p>Bemused and droll, paranoid and demagogic, Sinaee’s much-anticipated debut collection presents a world beset by precarity, illness, and human sprawl. Anxiety, hospitalization, and body paranoia recur in the poems’ imagery — Sinaee went through two-and-a-half years of chemotherapy in his mid-twenties, documented in the vertiginous multipart prose poem “Twelve Storeys” — making <em>Intruder</em> a book that seems especially timely, notably in the dreamlike, minimalist sequence “Half-Life,” written during the lockdown in Toronto in spring 2020.</p>
<p>Progressing from plain-spoken dispatches about city life to lucid nightmares of the calamities of history, the poems in <em>Intruder</em> ultimately grapple with, and even embrace, the daily undertaking of living through whatever the hell it is we’re living through.</p>