From Amazon
Dionne Brand's Governor General's Award-winning collection of poetry, Land to Light On, is a rich and powerful testimonial of black suffering in the Americas, in a tale that shifts between story and song. Rough and urban, her poems are hard and tough and true, political and liturgical and musical: "the girl starts the morning too, ragged like years / ahead of her, she is a translator of languages / and souls, she waits for the bus, her Walkman / in a war with the pages she's been handed." Brand sings sculptures of text, written as extended fragments of a singular whole, and brings the language down to where it speaks, to where it moves us. "I sit down in the bar myself," she writes, "in a lot of bar, if I could drink / my way dead I would but my stomach give out before my heart."
Brand, whose other books include the acclaimed novels At the Full and Change of the Moon and In Another Place Not Here as well as the poetry collection No Language Is Neutral, writes music to be heard as much as words to be read. She manages to be wholly capable in both traditions while keeping a firm foothold in each, giving weight to dialect and diatribe, the speech of the heart. "the mouth of the world will open / yawn her in, float her like a language on its tongue, // forgetting / all at once and therefore fading surprise // at the hard matter of vanity." --Rob McLennan
Review
“As behind most of our human celebrations, there are tragedies being played out behind the curtain of joy, for Brand is well aware of the world’s longings and despairs, how we are all the offspring of slaves, and/or – what is so much harder to bear – the offspring of slave owners.”
–Quill & Quire
“Brand’s distinguished voice and articulate vision situate her galaxies beyond most contemporary practitioners of poetry.”
–Globe and Mail
“Brand’s poetry is confrontational/confessionalism. She uses her life experiences to talk about oppression of many sorts in the Caribbean and Canada. She attempts to find links between different kinds of oppression – and that is the strength of her work. It is multilayered. There may be a nihilist tendency – but it is justified.”
–George Elliott Clarke
“You don’t read Dionne Brand, you hear her.”
–Toronto Life
–Quill & Quire
“Brand’s distinguished voice and articulate vision situate her galaxies beyond most contemporary practitioners of poetry.”
–Globe and Mail
“Brand’s poetry is confrontational/confessionalism. She uses her life experiences to talk about oppression of many sorts in the Caribbean and Canada. She attempts to find links between different kinds of oppression – and that is the strength of her work. It is multilayered. There may be a nihilist tendency – but it is justified.”
–George Elliott Clarke
“You don’t read Dionne Brand, you hear her.”
–Toronto Life
Book Description
Land to Light On opens onto the landscape of Canada. “Out here I am…not even safe as the sea,” she writes. “If I am peaceful…is not peace,/is getting used to harm.” Brand writes about a place where she is an outsider – as any poet or painter must be – and also about the many outsiders who have come here and settled over the years, uncomfortable with the land and its people, uncomfortable sometimes with themselves.
No one writes about this country like Brand, free of post-colonial cant yet selvedged with Black suffering in the Americas. Speaking of memory but without a longing for the past, these poems hover between story and song; between groundings of life, wherever your landfall, and the grace of love and light. They ring with a poet’s hesitations, a woman’s praise and prayer for her people and their place. “It always takes long to come to what you have to say, you have to/sweep this stretch of land up around your feet and point to the/signs, pleat whole histories with pins in your mouth and guess/at the fall of words.”
No one writes about this country like Brand, free of post-colonial cant yet selvedged with Black suffering in the Americas. Speaking of memory but without a longing for the past, these poems hover between story and song; between groundings of life, wherever your landfall, and the grace of love and light. They ring with a poet’s hesitations, a woman’s praise and prayer for her people and their place. “It always takes long to come to what you have to say, you have to/sweep this stretch of land up around your feet and point to the/signs, pleat whole histories with pins in your mouth and guess/at the fall of words.”
From the Back Cover
“As behind most of our human celebrations, there are tragedies being played out behind the curtain of joy, for Brand is well aware of the world’s longings and despairs, how we are all the offspring of slaves, and/or – what is so much harder to bear – the offspring of slave owners.”
–Quill & Quire
“Brand’s distinguished voice and articulate vision situate her galaxies beyond most contemporary practitioners of poetry.”
–Globe and Mail
“Brand’s poetry is confrontational/confessionalism. She uses her life experiences to talk about oppression of many sorts in the Caribbean and Canada. She attempts to find links between different kinds of oppression – and that is the strength of her work. It is multilayered. There may be a nihilist tendency – but it is justified.”
–George Elliott Clarke
“You don’t read Dionne Brand, you hear her.”
–Toronto Life
–Quill & Quire
“Brand’s distinguished voice and articulate vision situate her galaxies beyond most contemporary practitioners of poetry.”
–Globe and Mail
“Brand’s poetry is confrontational/confessionalism. She uses her life experiences to talk about oppression of many sorts in the Caribbean and Canada. She attempts to find links between different kinds of oppression – and that is the strength of her work. It is multilayered. There may be a nihilist tendency – but it is justified.”
–George Elliott Clarke
“You don’t read Dionne Brand, you hear her.”
–Toronto Life
About the Author
Dionne Brand is a poet and novelist living in Toronto. She was recently named the Poet Laureate of Toronto. Her ten volumes of poetry include Land to Light On, winner of the Governor General’s Award and the Trillium Book Award in 1997; thirsty, winner of the Pat Lowther Memorial Award and a finalist for the Trillium Book Award and the Griffin Poetry Prize; Inventory, a finalist for the Governor General’s Award; and the forthcoming Ossuaries. Dionne Brand’s most recent novel, What We All Long For, was published to great acclaim in Canada and Italy in 2005, and won the Toronto Book Award. In 2006, she won the Harbourfront Festival Prize for her contribution to the world of books and writing. Brand is Professor of English in the School of English and Theatre Studies at the University of Guelph.