Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Spine

Rate this book

In her second collection of poems, K.I. Press reflects on a great love of books and fictional characters, and of reading, printing and typography. Her poetry takes existing texts to thrilling heights, bringing Alice in Wonderland alongside Jane Eyre and the Bible. Readers will delight in the caustic silliness of poems like "Slushpile" and "Library," and in the psychological depth and tragedy of the "Anne and Jane" sequence.

The act of reading and the imaginative process provide the foreground of Spine. Reading is at once indulgent and sharply necessary. One poem tells of books who take on the physical character of their genre. In another we meet a reader of Proust who finds herself unable to leave her reading, and in another the sense of abandonment that comes during a sabbatical from reading, when "cats no longer sat in my lap, birds sang only when trying to wake me."

Presss fascination with reading opens onto a realm where fictional and historical characters expand beyond their original texts. The "Anne and Jane" sequence reexamines the heroines position in two well-known novels. In "Joanna" the poet provides a vivid characterization of typographer Eric Gill and his home life, from the perspective of his daughter Joan. "The Letters" are fiery variations on the biblical letters from Paul to several of the early churches. Here Press combines modern details and a new level of fervency to recreate the impatience and overwhelming tenderness of this apostle.

The landscape and populace of this collection take their cues from contemporary geography and from styles reminiscent of other periods. Throughout Spine, Press demonstrates a deftness for shifting between contexts, making Jane Eyre a function of contemporary female experience and placing mementos of the twenty-first century inside the Bible.

This book is a Smyth-sewn paperback with cover flaps. The text was typeset by Andrew Steeves in Eric Gills Joanna types and printed on Rolland Zephyr Laid paper. The cover is printed letterpress on Fraser Mosaic stock.

90 pages, Paperback

First published September 4, 2004

Loading...
Loading...

About the author

K.I. Press

4 books20 followers
K.I. Press is a Canadian writer who grew up in northern Alberta and now lives in Winnipeg, with stops along the way in Edmonton, Ottawa, Vancouver and Toronto.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
1 (20%)
4 stars
2 (40%)
3 stars
1 (20%)
2 stars
0 (0%)
1 star
1 (20%)
Displaying 1 of 1 review
480 reviews1 follower
August 19, 2019
This poet completely lacks imagination. In one of the poems near the end, she writes about how she is getting a PhD; I suppose this is why the poems lack any kind of interesting experience and are focused instead on reading, reading, and more reading. There are constant mentions of words, libraries, names of famous authors, and titles of classics. Most of the poems are narratives and they don't really offer anything substantial or poetic (aside from some clever enjambment). Spine seems dull and amateurish...perhaps Press has a lot of knowledge of literature, but she isn't good at much else (hell, she isn't even good at alluding to literature in a meaningful way).

Surprisingly, this book only contains twenty-six poems. Some of them are multi-part poems (like the ten page dialogue of "Anne and Jane," or the twelve page "The Letters" which is basically a boring tale about the apostle Paul). I ended up reading this book twice within a few days. The first day I was distracted and thought it might be my fault that I couldn't get into the poems. The re-read confirmed that this book is a huge disappointment.

Poems that I liked:
"Each morning, one half hour," "Bird Calls, Cicadas, Rain."

=2/26 (7.7%) poems that I liked.
Displaying 1 of 1 review