Jenna Butler

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Jenna Butler

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Born
in Norwich, The United Kingdom
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Member Since
April 2010

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Jenna Butler is an award-winning poet and essayist whose work has appeared in numerous journals and anthologies around the world. She is the author of three books of poetry, Seldom Seen Road (NeWest Press 2013), Wells (University of Alberta Press 2012) and Aphelion (NeWest Press 2010). Her book of essays is A Profession of Hope: Farming on the Edge of the Grizzly Trail (Wolsak and Wynn, 2015), and her latest work is the poetic travelogue Magnetic North: Sea Voyage to Svalbard (University of Alberta Press, 2018).

Butler is a professor of Creative Writing and Ecocriticism at Red Deer College in Canada. She lives with a den of coyotes and three resident moose on an organic farm in Alberta's north country.
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Average rating: 4.04 · 416 ratings · 88 reviews · 10 distinct worksSimilar authors
Revery: A Year of Bees

3.89 avg rating — 240 ratings3 editions
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Magnetic North: Sea Voyage ...

4.14 avg rating — 65 ratings4 editions
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A Profession of Hope: Farmi...

4.32 avg rating — 53 ratings — published 2015 — 4 editions
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Wells (Robert Kroetsch Series)

4.57 avg rating — 21 ratings — published 2012 — 4 editions
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Seldom Seen Road

4.28 avg rating — 18 ratings — published 2013
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Aphelion

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 15 ratings — published 2010 — 2 editions
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East Coast: Arctic to Tropic

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4.50 avg rating — 2 ratings
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Weather

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 1 rating — published 2008
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Beyond the Park An Antholog...

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it was ok 2.00 avg rating — 1 rating
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The Trilogy of North Americ...

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Divisadero
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The Cat's Table
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Two O'Clock Creek...
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Quotes by Jenna Butler  (?)
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“It doesn’t take a farm to invoke the iron taste of leaving in your mouth. Anyone who loves a small plot of ground — a city garden, a vacant lot with some guerilla beds, a balcony of pots — understands the almost physical hurt of parting from it, even for a minor stint. I hurt every day I wake up in our city bed, wondering how the light will be changing over the front field or across the pond, whether the moose will be in the willow by the cabin again, if the wren has fledged her young ones yet and we’ll return to find the box untended. I can feel where the farm is at any point in my day, not out of some arcane sixth sense developed from years of summer nights out there with the coyotes under the stars, but because of the bond between that earth and this body. Some grounds we choose; some are our instinctive homes.”
Jenna Butler, A Profession of Hope: Farming on the Edge of the Grizzly Trail
tags: home, land

“I think I realized intellectually at that point, watching the city slowly give way to the last vestiges of parkland and then the black spruce forests of the North, that I could come back to the land deeply fearful, or I could choose to see it as a place of healing. Pain colours us; we carry it behind our eyes for a long time after it’s passed. At some point, we have to decide whether we’re willing to let it take over our lives and change them permanently, or whether we’re going to wrench ourselves open again to the world. I couldn’t make that choice in the city.”
Jenna Butler, A Profession of Hope: Farming on the Edge of the Grizzly Trail

“I won’t wax poetic about the land in a perfectionist sense: we work hard out here, and things constantly threaten the tiny equilibrium we’ve established in the market garden. Whatever peace we find is often hard won. But I stand firmly with Berry and Kingsolver and so many other writers who possess a deep need to step outside the city to find a place of calm. I don’t like the word “authentic”; at best, it’s divisive and antagonistic, implying one way of being is intrinsically better than another. But I do very much favour the notion of alignment. I’m convinced that at the heart of the matter lies a desire to draw what we do into alignment with how we live. Some of us aren’t in a place where we can live consistently on the land that holds our hearts, but come mishaps or miracles, we’re bound and determined to make that land as much a part of who we are as humanly possible.”
Jenna Butler, A Profession of Hope: Farming on the Edge of the Grizzly Trail
tags: home, land

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