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Mortal Remains

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There are many truths in life we know of but fail to acknowledge because they cause too much pain. It is these dark places that Patrick Lane, one of Canada's most important writers, tackles in Mortal Remains . These poems will take readers deep into their own psyches and force them to examine issues close to the bone - if not close to the heart. This book is a must-read for poetry fans unfamiliar with Lane's haunting works.

90 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1999

8 people want to read

About the author

Patrick Lane

85 books39 followers
Patrick Lane was born in Nelson, British Columbia, Canada, on March 26, 1939. He has no formal education beyond high school in Vernon, B.C. From 1957 to 1968 with his young wife, Mary, he raised three children, Mark, Christopher, and Kathryn, and began working at a variety of jobs, from common labourer, truck driver, Cat skinner, chokerman, boxcar loader, Industrial First-Aid Man in the northern bush, to clerk at a number of sawmills in the Interior of British Columbia. He has been a salesman, office manager, and an Industrial Accountant. In 1968 his first wife divorced him. Much of his life after 1968 has been spent as an itinerant poet, wandering over three continents and many countries. He began writing with serious intent in 1960, practicing his craft late at night in small-town western Canada until he moved to Vancouver in early 1965 to work and to join the new generation of artists and writers who were coming of age in the early Sixties.

In 1966, with bill bissett and Seymour Mayne, he established Very Stone House, publishing the new post-war generation of poets. In 1968, he decided to devote his life exclusively to writing, travelling to South America where he lived for two years. On his return, he established a new relationship with his second wife, Carol, had two more children, Michael and Richard, and settled first in the Okanagan Valley in 1972 and then in 1974 on the west coast of Canada at Middle Point near the fishing village of Pender Harbour on The Sunshine Coast where he worked as a carpenter and building contractor. In 1978, he divorced and went to work as Writer-in-Residence at the University of Manitoba in Winnipeg where he began his life with the poet, Lorna Crozier. Since then, he has been a resident writer at Concordia University in Montreal, The University of Alberta in Edmonton, the Saskatoon Public Library, and the University of Toronto. He taught English Literature at The University of Saskatchewan in Saskatoon from 1986 to 1990, and Creative Writing at the University of Victoria, British Columbia from 1991 to 2004. He is presently retired from institutional teaching and leads private writing retreats as well as teaching at such schools as The Banff Writing Workshops, ‘Booming Ground’ at the University of British Columbia, The Victoria Writing School, and The Sage Hill Experience in Saskatchewan. He and his wife, Lorna Crozier, presently reside in a small community outside Victoria where he gardens and works at his craft.

His poetry, short stories, criticism, and non-fiction have won many prizes over the past forty-five years, including The Governor-General’s Award for “Poems: New & Selected” in 1979, The Canadian Authors Association Award for his “Selected Poems” in 1988, and, in 1987, a “Nellie” award (Canada) and The National Radio Award (USA) for the best public radio program for the script titled “Chile,” co-authored with Lorna Crozier. He has received major awards from The Canada Council, The Ontario Arts Council, The Saskatchewan Arts Board, The Manitoba Arts Board, The Ontario Arts Council, and the British Columbia Arts Board. He has received National Magazine awards for both his poetry and his fiction. He is the author of more than twenty books and he has been called by many writers and critics “the best poet of his generation.”

As a critic and commentator, he appears regularly on CBC, the national radio service in Canada, and on numerous other media outlets across Canada.

He has appeared at literary festivals around the world and has read and published his work in many countries including England, France, the Czech Republic, Italy, China, Japan, Chile, Colombia, the Netherlands, and Russia. His poetry and fiction appear in all major Canadian anthologies of English literature. A critical monograph of his life and writing titled "Patrick Lane,” by George Woodcock, was published by ECW Press.

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
158 reviews
November 20, 2023
As his longtime companion, the poet Lorna Crozier has written, Patrick Lane was a poet "who sang the darkness." It doesn't get much darker than some of these poems, written 25 years after his brother's early death and his father's murder, events that changed his life. There is much violence, grief, horror and beauty in this poetry. Death and sex intertwined, grief and celebration -- awe. Whether it's a day in the Pitti Palace in Florence or a brawl in a Canadian bar, Lane can turn a memory into a stunning observation. There's nothing easy in the poem "Father", and the lines burn deep into one's consciousness: "My father with his bright burst heart, the bullet / exploding in him like some gift the wind had given him . . ." These very long lines, image piling on image, building like a juggernaut, can end as a wallop to the gut. In the three parts of Mortal Remains, not all is dark. Take "Feet," two appendages with a life of their own: ". . . The right / is small, troubled by night. It follows its brother, / hides behind its other, moves like a snake moves ". This book establishes the astonishing range of a poet we sorely miss.
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7 reviews7 followers
May 2, 2022
far too many poems about breasts.
Profile Image for Amanda.
164 reviews25 followers
November 25, 2018

The writing isn't void of style, a kind of clarity, or intelligence - however -

Some of its content is terribly off putting...

Repulsive sexual behavior - instances and occurances- situationts that - if the average individual were to be present for, I would assume would rather forget? Why write about it? I guess writing and reading it forces us all to acknowledge it's existance but... I'd rather not...
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews

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