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Imagining Sisyphus Happy

by Ian Sowton

99 pages; quality trade paperback (softcover); catalogue #05-3054; ISBN 1-4120-8056-8; US$13.00, C$14.95, EUR10.68, £7.48

Poems in Imagining Sisyphus Happy feature various voices and include cityscapes, satires, fables, wordplays, and memorials. This collection is not for readers looking for a confidently settled point of view.


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About the Book About the Author Excerpts Catalogue Information

About the Book

In ancient Greek mythology, Sisyphus was condemned by the gods to the meaningless activity of forever rolling a boulder to the top of a hill, then starting all over again after it had promptly rolled back downhill. Taking its cue from the famous essay on Sisyphus by the French existentialist writer Albert Camus, this book's paradoxical title and title-poem suggest the imperative of refusing to despair, of choosing one*s own meaning and taking responsibility for it.

Although Imagining Sisyphus Happy includes poems of complaint, mourning, and contemptuous or exasperated satire, the book*s overall stance affirms that existential imperative of refusing to despair. As a group these poems might be trying to imagine Sisyphus happy but they discourage I*ve-got-the-truth certainties of every stripe.

A number of these poems are at home in an urban cityscape, with various Toronto streets, parks, and backyards as their setting. As in the author*s first book of poems, Intricate Armada (2005), here there is a considerable range of tones, moods, and voices; these poems are not for readers looking for a single, confidently settled point of view.

The prevailing form in this new book of poems is so-called 'free verse', but there are some ballad-like poems and brief forays into very strict forms such as glosa, villanelle, and sonnet.

Mercy Jones, who is quite a strong presence in Intricate Armada, makes some further appearances in this volume, along with a new character called Tewler. Don*t ask the author where Mercy Jones or this guy Tewler came from‹he doesn*t know.



About the Author

After a university career teaching English literature, including contemporary Canadian poetry, Ian Sowton devotes a good deal of a contentedly busy retirement to writing poetry of his own. Imagining Sisyphus Happy is his second collection of poetry.



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