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DETAIL AND REGISTRATION:
Join MQUP author Margo Wheaton, along with authors Annick MacAskill, Alexander MacLeod, and HRM Poet Laureate Anna Quon, for an evening of words and music that explores the many ways we reach out and connect with each other, however fleeting or lasting.
Music will be provided by Kev Corbett.
Central Library
5440 Spring Garden Road
Halifax NS B3J 1E9
More details: https://halifax.bibliocommons.com/events/66ec30bd79c37d9f5da7badd
Margo Wheaton is the author of The Unlit Path Behind the House, which won the Fred Kerner Book Award from the Canadian Authors Association. She was born in New Brunswick and lives in Halifax, Nova Scotia.
Silence in the belly of the breathing house. Night so deep / it’s reaching through rooms as if searching its pockets.
Standing in the midst of her childhood home, Margo Wheaton was struck by two things: the extent of the damage caused by her father’s and stepmother’s alcoholism and the life force that pulsed in the once-vibrant rooms and yard – in the abandoned trees, neglected flowerbeds, and gardens her parents had planted and tended for decades.
Radiant, grieving, and intensely musical, Rags of Night in Our Mouths is an exploration of human and environmental states of precarity and vulnerability. In the opening suite, Wheaton draws upon her family’s deep roots in the Tantramar Marsh area and constructs a hallucinatory world of fragility, chaos, and searing natural beauty as she writes her own version of Maritime gothic. Employing a variation of the ghazal, a historically Persian form popularized in Canada by the late New Brunswick–based poet John Thompson, she surveys the ruins of her working-class childhood home, a thriving place now ravaged by generational alcoholism and despair. Directed at first toward an absent beloved – a convention of the ghazal tradition – the focus moves in the second suite to the teeming, non-human world of an endangered saltmarsh on a wild shore of the Northumberland Strait bordering Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and Prince Edward Island. In the book’s closing suite, Wheaton honours a landscape slated to be destroyed and pays homage to “the broken-hearted, the bereaved” who walk the ragged shoreline, struggling to make sense of losses and death.
Meditative and beautifully crafted, Rags of Night in Our Mouths calls us to engage passionately with our suffering world.