Entombed within a thirty-kilometre-deep seam of rock, the fossils of Joggins, Nova Scotia are pried from a cliff-face by a version of the ocean out of which their creatures evolved-for the first time on Earth-more than three-hundred-million years ago. With probing metaphors and a keen eye on science, the poems in Origins create a multi-faceted portrait of evolution, extinction and climate change. Centered on the powerful Bay of Fundy, Origins compares the displaced, prehistoric marks of fossils with cultural marks like art and books. These varied poems observe eternal traces and lingering residues, from fossilized footprints to landscape sculpture to pollution and industrialization. With only one bone in a billion fossilized and a perpetually changing planetary surface, these celebratory yet cautionary poems also investigate chance, loss and ruin. The intersection of forces, which both create and destroy, are echoed by poems devoted to transitory art, the human addiction to energy, and an evolving media history (from nineteenth-century field drawings to twenty-first-century digital libraries). Origins is a nuanced ledger for a troubled world.
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Darryl Whetter is a short-story writer, novelist, poet, critic and professor. His debut collection of stories, A Sharp Tooth in the Fur (Goose Lane Editions) was one of the Globe and Mail?s Top 100 Books in 2003.His debut book of poems, Origins, received a starred review from the Quill & Quire. A former CBC Radio books panellist, he reviews for The Globe and Mail and The National Post. He resides in Church Point, Nova Scotia.
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