Burden

Douglas Burnet Smith
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Burden

Douglas Burnet Smith
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Found in: Arts & Letters, Canadian Poetry

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Overview

CANADIAN72 PAGESENGLISH

Promotional Details
  • Published date: Oct 24, 2020
  • Language: English
  • No. of Pages: 72
  • Publisher: University of Regina Press
  • ISBN: 9780889777729
  • Dimensions: 5.4" W x 0.4" L x 8.3" H

Douglas Burnet Smith is the GG Award–nominated author, and Burden is his seventeenth book of poetry. He divides his time between Atlantic Canada and Athens, Greece. He is currently Writer-in-Residence for the Antikythera Archeological Dive Project on the island of Antikythera, Greece, and teaches in the English Department at St. Francis Xavier University in Antigonish, Nova Scotia.

"This is a powerful and visceral book, written by Douglas Burnet Smith based on letters sent from the First World War front by Lance Corporal Reginald Smith, a distant relative. The relative was part of a squad that executed Private Herbert Burden for desertion. This story and the letters are the basis for Burden, written in verse form that transforms these events and conveys their emotional power, or as Smith puts it, gives 'voice and shape to the meditations of a ghost.'" -Toronto Star

"Smith's harrowing, tautly crafted long poem brings events of a century ago from shadow into light. To call this book 'unflinching' would be inaccurate, because it does flinch-as many readers need to and will flinch-at the stories it tells. Like few World War I poems since Wilfred Owen's, Burden asks that we face 'the old torment of the earth' and war's hasty disposal of those in its service. This is a book grounded in recovery, anger, and forgiveness." -Brian Bartlett, author of The Watchmaker's Table and Wanting the Day

"The poetry of Burden exposes the brutality of a solider's OSI (operational stress injury) with dignity and poignancy." -Lieutenant-General (ret) the Honourable Roméo Dallaire

"Smith's spare poems expand beyond memory or memorial into the injustice at the core of all war." -Benjamin Hertwig, author of Slow War

"Burden imprints our consciousness with the searing reality of a traumatized soldier executed for deserting the battlefield, and with the haunted yet epiphanic aftermath for a comrade assigned to the firing squad. Smith's service to those casualties of war and his dispatches to us, their inheritors, supplant dishonour with empathy, justice, and catharsis." -Richard Lemm, author of Jeopardy and Shape of Things to Come

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