Paul Vermeersch
Goodreads Author
Born
Mississauga, Canada
Website
Genre
Member Since
July 2015
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Self-Defence for the Brave and Happy: Poems
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published
2018
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2 editions
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Don't Let It End Like This Tell Them I Said Something
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published
2014
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6 editions
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The Reinvention of the Human Hand
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published
2010
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6 editions
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Shared Universe: New and Selected Poems 1995–2020
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NMLCT: Poems
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Between the Walls
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published
2005
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The Fat Kid
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published
2002
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5 editions
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Burn
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published
2000
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The I. V. Lounge Reader
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published
2001
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3 editions
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Shared Universe: New and Selected Poems 1995–2020
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Paul’s Recent Updates
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""One way they make you a monster is by making all your clothes too small"
This is an incredible book. The concepts alone are so captivating. Paired with Paul's unique writing, they leap off the page. " |
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Paul Vermeersch
is now following Nathaniel's reviews
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Paul Vermeersch
rated a book it was amazing
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Paul Vermeersch
rated a book it was amazing
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Paul Vermeersch
rated a book it was amazing
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Paul Vermeersch
rated a book it was amazing
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Paul Vermeersch
rated a book it was amazing
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Paul Vermeersch
voted for
These Memories Do Not Belong to Us
as
Readers' Favorite Science Fiction
in the
Opening Round
of the
2025 Goodreads Choice Awards.
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Paul Vermeersch
liked that
Jacob
voted for
One Day, Everyone Will Have Always Been Against This
in the
2025 Goodreads Choice Awards.
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“Lost Things"
There are many ways to understand the word
lost, my love. When you were born, the last
Pyrenean ibex, a tawny female named Celia,
had not yet lived to see the view from Torla
overlooking Monte Perdido, but her great-
grandsire stood on the cliffs of Ordesa,
positioned on hoof-tips dainty as dimes,
and he shook his impregnable skull, a coffer
of brass and nobility crowned with bayonets,
as though in defiance of all who dwelt
in the highlands from Catalonia to Aquataine.
Their kind is vanished now. Forever lost. Perdido.
And when you dressed in a Girl Guide’s
uniform of Persian blue on Tuesday nights,
my love, in the long-lost basement of Grace
United Church, to play indoor baseball
and make believe that faerie magic
could make you rich or important or happy,
pods of baiji dolphins still swam in a river
you’d never heard of and would not think about
until years later, when together we would learn
from the evening news that the baiji
were lost, at last, from the Yangtze,
and in their place there came a universal emptiness.
There are many ways to understand the word
lost, but it does not help to imagine a secret
place where lost things go. When last
I held you in my arms, my love, the West
African black rhinoceros was still magnificent
and still alive, but now the gentleness of your breath
on my bare neck is as lost as the dusty, confident
snort of that once breath-taking beast. Great strength
is no protection, and neither is love. We are born,
and our births are lost. We can’t go back to them.
Each embrace ends with an ending. When we become,
what we once thought we’d be is lost. We keep becoming.”
― The Reinvention of the Human Hand
There are many ways to understand the word
lost, my love. When you were born, the last
Pyrenean ibex, a tawny female named Celia,
had not yet lived to see the view from Torla
overlooking Monte Perdido, but her great-
grandsire stood on the cliffs of Ordesa,
positioned on hoof-tips dainty as dimes,
and he shook his impregnable skull, a coffer
of brass and nobility crowned with bayonets,
as though in defiance of all who dwelt
in the highlands from Catalonia to Aquataine.
Their kind is vanished now. Forever lost. Perdido.
And when you dressed in a Girl Guide’s
uniform of Persian blue on Tuesday nights,
my love, in the long-lost basement of Grace
United Church, to play indoor baseball
and make believe that faerie magic
could make you rich or important or happy,
pods of baiji dolphins still swam in a river
you’d never heard of and would not think about
until years later, when together we would learn
from the evening news that the baiji
were lost, at last, from the Yangtze,
and in their place there came a universal emptiness.
There are many ways to understand the word
lost, but it does not help to imagine a secret
place where lost things go. When last
I held you in my arms, my love, the West
African black rhinoceros was still magnificent
and still alive, but now the gentleness of your breath
on my bare neck is as lost as the dusty, confident
snort of that once breath-taking beast. Great strength
is no protection, and neither is love. We are born,
and our births are lost. We can’t go back to them.
Each embrace ends with an ending. When we become,
what we once thought we’d be is lost. We keep becoming.”
― The Reinvention of the Human Hand
“Dystopias are scary because you can see people struggling, but utopias are scarier because you can see that they stopped.”
― Shared Universe: New and Selected Poems 1995–2020
― Shared Universe: New and Selected Poems 1995–2020
“Velvet peeled away from my heart, my delicate pericardium, shocked that something beautiful did not love me. I grew six terrible inches. My bones hardened into their permanence.”
― Shared Universe: New and Selected Poems 1995–2020
― Shared Universe: New and Selected Poems 1995–2020
“Oh it was gorgeousness and gorgeosity made flesh. The trombones crunched redgold under my bed, and behind my gulliver the trumpets three-wise silverflamed, and there by the door the timps rolling through my guts and out again crunched like candy thunder. Oh, it was wonder of wonders. And then, a bird of like rarest spun heavenmetal, or like silvery wine flowing in a spaceship, gravity all nonsense now, came the violin solo above all the other strings, and those strings were like a cage of silk round my bed. Then flute and oboe bored, like worms of like platinum, into the thick thick toffee gold and silver. I was in such bliss, my brothers.”
― A Clockwork Orange
― A Clockwork Orange

















































