From Amazon
An absolute faith in Christianity is fundamental to Concrete and Wild Carrot, and readers who are resistant to sincere religion in contemporary writing may find themselves resisting Avison's poems. She frequently portrays God as the author or artist of the universe, with temporal art occupying a vital but subordinate position. Languages, however, are gifts from God that shape their writers and speakers:
Hebrew's ornate iron, its quirks around the line
(vocal or consonant) in you have wrought
the odd intransigent openness--and untaught
much we grew up to mimic--or disdain.
Concrete and Wild Carrot threatens to be just a nice little collection, but Avison is far too intelligent and aware of the world's woes to allow that to happen. The final poem in the book, "Alternative to Riots / but All Citizens Must Play" is an overt call for peaceful anarchism, for the destruction of all social fictions to the greater glory of God and humanity. It's stirring stuff, and will make anyone look over Avison's poems with a keener, more revolutionary eye. --Jack Illingworth
Review
That is why readers should celebrate the arrival of Concrete and Wild Carrot, a beautifully designed collection proving that Avison, in her mid-80s, still has the power to contain and encode multitudes. In the explanatory notes and acknowledgements of the volume, we learn that Avison is now living in a seniors' residence and that her poems are written on loose pieces of paper, which others then gather and key into a computer. These circumstances are worth mentioning not only because they are unique, but because they place the profound achievement of the collection into perspective.
Particularly noteworthy is the poem "Other Oceans", an 11-page extended narrative masterfully encompassing Creation, inspiration, and the path toward authentic worship, with a scope and energy reminiscent of Wallace Stevens's "Notes Toward a Supreme Fiction". The poem begins ambitiously, imagining the evolutionary sweep of the beginning of time: "When the convulsive earth / arched under the sea" into "a fraction of second of the one day that's a thousand years." Within this panoramic opening, Avison positions the creative impulse as that which enables the artist to aspire toward renewal and re-creation: "Where is the holy / vanishing-point / where life began and daily may/ bring us alive again?" As the poem draws toward a conclusion, Avison positions God within the daily effort to re-imagine the original creative urge: "one artist who, in one / impulse once called out, from surging / waters and fires and molten / rock our earth, our little lives, // maintains, Himself, / the no longer appearing / structures." It is common for writers today to re-imagine biblical stories in a contemporary context, but few have the imaginative and linguistic competence to breathe new life into Creation itself.
Harold Heft (Books in Canada)
-- Books in Canada
Concrete and Wild Carrot is quintessential Avison, undiminished by age (she is 84), still probing ... the wonders of language itself. -- National Post, January 18, 2003, review by Robyn Sarah
The pairing of [concrete and wild carrot]... aptly symbolizes the collection itself, which delights in paradox. -- Toronto Star, December 15, 2002, review by Barbara Carey
The poems here are deceptively accessible but open to multiple readings. -- Quill & Quire, January 2003, review by Patrick Woodcock
Book Description
"...Margaret Avison is a national treasure. For many decades she has forged a way to write, against the grain, some of the most humane, sweet and profound poetry of our time." - from the Griffin Poetry Prize Judges' Citation
In Margaret Avison's new poems, little pleasures are bound up with larger ones. Her slightest subjects - beloved Toronto parks with their population of oaks, firs, squirrels, dogs, kids, even ants, and the minutest sighs of her contemporary urban soundscape - all have their being within an immense composition that calls and hauls us to a largeness, a category-breaking "always unthinkable" beyond.
From the Publisher
The judges' citation for this book reads:
"If beauty, as Alfred North Whitehead defines it, is a quality which finds its exemplification in actual occasions,' and if beauty is more completely exemplified in imperfection and discord' than in the perfection of harmony,' then Margaret Avison's Concrete and Wild Carrot is an occasion of beauty. Avison's poetry is also alive in its sublimity and its humility: wonder, readiness, simplicity' the gifts of perception Avison attributes to her Christian faith imbue every poem in this book with a rare spirit of disorderly love. Margaret Avison is a national treasure. For many decades she has forged a way to write, against the grain, some of the most humane, sweet and profound poetry of our time."
About the Author
Margaret Avison was born in 1918 in Galt, Ontario, raised in Regina, Calgary and Toronto, where she completed high school in 1936. She continued her studies at University of Toronto earning a B.A. in 1940 and an M.A. in 1963. Her work has been recognized with two Governor General's Awards for Poetry (Winter and Sun and No Time), by three honorary doctorates and by an officership in the Order of Canada. One of the poems in Concrete and Wild Carrot ("Prospecting," retitled from "An-astronomy") was awarded first place in the category of the Canadian Church Press Awards for 2000. Her other publications include The Dumbfounding, sunblue, Selected Poems, A Kind of Perseverance (prose) and Not Yet but Still.