Susan Gevirtz is interviewed over at Touch the Donkey; Adrienne Adams has a poem up in the "poetry pause" series via The League of Canadian Poets; rob mclennan has new work up at Gone Lawn; Nada Gordon's recent Segue Series reading with Kit Robinson is now up on YouTube; and Julia Polyck-O'Neill has a new poem up at NewPoetry, as does Eric Schmaltz, and Kate Siklosi!
Saturday, December 13, 2025
some author activity: Gevirtz, Adams, mclennan, Gordon, Polyck-O'Neill, Schmaltz + Siklosi,
Friday, December 12, 2025
new from above/ground press: Certain Forces, by N.W. Lea
Certain Forces
N.W. Lea
$6
Field Triptych
1.
Shadows lever grass.
The soil is in trouble with ease.
My feet peregrinate
in the suddenly foreign
autumn blocks.
2.
Frost. Every light is an event,
every event pins light.
We are always convulsing.
There is nothing profound
about the in-groups,
the corded coteries.
3.
Especially,
when she tilts her head,
slushy with wonder.
Her excellent mind
not tyrannized.
Her skin twinned
with the silent,
real earth.
published in Ottawa by above/ground press
December 2025
a/g subscribers receive a complimentary copy
cover image by N.W. Lea; portrait of the author by Zofia Lea
Born in Whitehorse, Yukon, N.W. Lea grew up on the West Island of Montreal and in and around Ottawa, including Lanark County and the Stormont, Dundas and Glengarry Tricounty. He currently lives with his wife and two children in Whitehorse. He has been quietly publishing his Surrrealist/Romantic brand of compact, mystical, sad sack poetry for close to two decades. Please find his trade books at invisiblepublishing.com and his chapbooks at abovegroundpress.blogspot.com. When he is not writing, he is parenting, brooding or riding mountain bikes.
This is Lea’s seventh above/ground press chapbook, after light years (2006), Present! (2014), Nervous System (2018), Five Mothers (2019), Less Dream (2021) and Natural Man (2022).
To order, send cheques (add $2 for postage; in US, add $3; outside North America, add $7) to: rob mclennan, 2423 Alta Vista Drive, Ottawa ON K1H 7M9. E-transfer or PayPal at rob_mclennan (at) hotmail.com or the PayPal button at www.robmclennan.blogspot.com
Thursday, December 11, 2025
The Peter F. Yacht Club annual regatta/christmas party/reading!
lovingly hosted by rob mclennan,
The Peter F. Yacht Club annual regatta/christmas party/reading
at Anina’s Café, 280 Joffre-Bélanger Way, Ottawa
Saturday, December 27, 2025
doors 7pm; reading 7:30pm
with readings from yacht club regulars and irregulars alike, including: Jennifer Baker, Frances Boyle, Conyer Clayton, David Currie, Michelle Desbarats, AJ Dolman, Amanda Earl, Claire Farley, Cara Goodwin, Chris Johnson, Margo LaPierre, IAN MARTIN, rob mclennan, Christine McNair, James Moran, Lee Parpart, Colin Quin, Mahaila Smith, Grant Wilkins and Chuqiao Yang (and possibly others,
see my report on the event two years ago here (last year's event hadn't a report, unfortunately;
Wednesday, December 10, 2025
new from above/ground press: [OKAY], by Buck Downs
[OKAY]
Buck Downs
$6
[okay]
this is
the last time
I’m doing this
again
published in Ottawa by above/ground press
December 2025
a/g subscribers receive a complimentary copy
Buck Downs divides his time between Washington, D.C., and Ellisville, Miss. His latest full-length is Exit Style, available at buckdowns.com
This is Buck Downs's fifth above/ground chapbook, after Shiftless [Harvester] (2016), The Hack of Heaven (2017), Another Tricky Day (2020) and BURNTORANGE (2025).
To order, send cheques (add $2 for postage; in US, add $3; outside North America, add $7) to: rob mclennan, 2423 Alta Vista Drive, Ottawa ON K1H 7M9. E-transfer or PayPal at rob_mclennan (at) hotmail.com or the PayPal button at www.robmclennan.blogspot.com
Tuesday, December 9, 2025
Katerina Vaughan Fretwell reviews Penn Kemp's Lives of Dead Poets (2025) via The League of Canadian Poets
Katerina Vaughan Fretwell provides a review of Penn Kemp’s Lives of Dead Poets (2025) via The League of Canadian Poets. Thanks so much! This is actually the fourth review of Kemp's title, after Jennifer Wenn's review over at The Miramichi Reader, Karl Jirgens at The Typescript and Gordon Phinn at The Seaboard Review. Thanks much! You can see Fretwell's original review here.
In the golden age of Toronto’s explosive poetry scene in the early 70s, Penn Kemp met many vital poets who have since passed away. Her longstanding connections to these revered poets inspired her to write the chapbook Lives of the Dead Poets. As host of A Space Reading Series (this reviewer exhibited on the Members Wall), publishing with venerable Coach House and living on Toronto Island, Penn made soon-to-be-lifelong friends: Daphne Marlatt, Phyllis Webb, P.K. Page (P.K. Irwin as artist), Robert Creeley, Allan Ginsberg, and letter-friend Diane di Prima.
Kemp’s elegies respond to the styles of the poets whom she memorializes in verse: “A lament for those who have left/ the present, the planet and possibility/ behind, left us bewildered by/ no more/ words” (“Lives of Dead Poets”). For Gwendolyn MacEwan, Penn praises: “Your fingers/ semaphore a complex code/ we cannot read.// A ring of hands/ ready to catch or pull you up” (“Not Waving But Drowning”). This reviewer also mourned a cancelled reading by MacEwan up north.
In “Gone Fishing”, Kemp elegizes Robert Creeley in the manner of the famous Kempian wordplay: “Reel back the real, back/ to the little wicker// basket carrying trout,/ Creeley.”
For Ontario poet Ellen Jaffe, Penn includes a poignant event: “Ellen dying in hospice listens in on/ Zoom as Voices Israel read her poems.// How wonderful to be read to at last.” (“Homage for Ellen S. Jaffe, Poet”).
Kemp honours bp nichol, one of the Four Horsemen, with a high compliment: “our// Rumi, born in all/ their holy,/ poetic fecundity” (“For bp nichol”), the words lovingly dancing across the page. Phyllis Webb, champion of the anti-ghazal, leaves us in a sense of Kempian whimsy: “How can we forget you? You left/ a whiff of unicorn in your wake.” (“The Poet in Charge”). Also magical, John Ashbery, the Rowan Bard, is commemorated thus: “‘Rowan is the tree of power, causing/ life and magic to flower. (“Alphabet for Ashbery”).
A lively anecdote revivifies P.K. Page: “P.K. Page was dressed to the nines … // At the stove’s first growl, she leapt up and alighted/ for the evening … closest to the door.// An oil stove had exploded on her ….// But she made that perch [couch arm] hers, crossing elegant legs,/ gallantly …” (“The Girl from Sao Paulo”).
For an elegiac taste of the other poets that Penn wistfully sets in stone, read this marvellous paean to influential Canadian [except Creeley and Ashbery] poets, with a nod to William Wordsworth’s “Ode to Intimations of Immortality”: “Only their poetry can still convey/ intimations of immortality ….// Only their poems can transcribe/ mysterium tremendum …// For me. For you.” (“One by One, They Depart, the Great Ones”).
For Kemp’s essay sourcing her inspiration, see
https://periodicityjournal.blogspot.com/2025/03/penn-kemp-one-by-one-they-depart-great.html.
Monday, December 8, 2025
new from above/ground press: Lakes of Titan, by David Gaffney
Lakes of Titan
David Gaffney
$6
published in Ottawa by above/ground pressColonyRow upon row of small people in pods lay perfectly still as if they were asleep. They were small, about the size of ventriloquist dolls, but I was assured that they would grow to become full-sized members of staff. They all looked a little like Melvyn Bragg, even the female ones, with thick ruffled hair and an expression on their faces that suggested they had thought of something droll and would tell you later. Soon the entire company would be run by the creatures they were growing here. Small fans stirred the air about the staff member’s faces to help them get used to adversity, which they may meet in the real world. Lights were low, yet now and again, bursts of colour and fragments of film flashed across the walls and ceiling. Music and podcasts played to ensure that the subjects were equipped with good humour and imagination so they wouldn’t sound robotic like some of the earlier versions. I was told this was top secret. What was even more top secret was which previous members of staff had been computer-powered hybrids of machine and flesh, who had since been decommissioned while we waited for this new batch. Maybe this was something we already knew, but weren’t aware that we knew, like the way the Chuckle Brothers entered our consciousness long before they appeared on our screens. Mahler’s fifth was playing quietly out of the speakers and it reminded me that Mahler’s wife once worked as a lab assistant over-seeing a colony of praying mantis.
December 2025
a/g subscribers receive a complimentary copy
cover artwork by Gary Fisher
David Gaffney is the author of the novels Never Never (2008), All The Places I’ve Ever Lived (2017) and Out Of The Dark (2021), and the flash fiction and short story collections Sawn-Off Tales (2006), Aromabingo (2007), The Half-Life of Songs (2010) and More Sawn-Off Tales (2013). He has published two graphic novels with Dan Berry – The Three Rooms In Valerie’s Head (2018) and Rivers (2021) – and is working on a third. His short story collection Concrete Fields (Salt Publishing 2023) was long listed for the Edgehill Short Story Prize and his latest collection, Whale, was published by Osmosis in 2024. He is Senior Manager for literature at Arts Council England.
To order, send cheques (add $2 for postage; in US, add $3; outside North America, add $7) to: rob mclennan, 2423 Alta Vista Drive, Ottawa ON K1H 7M9. E-transfer or PayPal at rob_mclennan (at) hotmail.com or the PayPal button at www.robmclennan.blogspot.com
Saturday, December 6, 2025
some author activity: Smith, Browne, Carr, Ebbitt, Armantrout, Barwin + McEwan,
Mahaila Smith has new work up at Strange Horizons; the recent "Writing as Alchemy" event, featuring readings by Laynie Browne, Julie Carr and Chloe Garcia Roberts, is now on YouTube via the HDS Center for the Study of World Religions; Katie Ebbitt has new work in the Spotlight series; Rae Armantrout has new work in Plume; and both Gary Barwin and Drew McEwen have new work up at The Ex-Puritan.
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