Once more, I offer my annual list of the
seemingly-arbitrary “worth repeating” (given ‘best’ is such an inconclusive,
imprecise designation), constructed from the list of Canadian poetry titles
I’ve managed to review throughout the past year. This is my fifteenth annual list [see also: 2024, 2023, 2022, 2021,
2020, 2019, 2018, 2017, 2016, 2015, 2014, 2013, 2012, 2011] since
dusie-maven Susana Gardner originally suggested various dusie-esque poets write
up their own versions of same, and I thank her both for the ongoing
opportunity, and her original prompt. I recently caught “The best Canadian poetry of 2025” list via the CBC website, and saw not one but three poetry titles I hadn’t been
aware of. Did you know Canisia Lubrin had a new poetry book this year? You
probably did, whereas I did not. Did you know about Ben von Jagow? Sarain
Frank Soonias? Jason Purcell’s latest? I’ve been waiting for a copy of Vera Hadzic’s, also. I’m also hearing some amazing things about Melissa Powless Day,
as well. I mean, I hate being behind, and I’ve already attempted to get these
books, get some interviews happening with them two poets I hadn’t heard of
previously. Either way, I appreciate CBC including my latest, the book of sentences (University of Calgary Press, 2025), on such a glorious list! And you know, if you ever wish to sign up for our occasional email list for VERSeFest: Ottawa's International Poetry Festival (including information on our Ottawa Poets Laureate) or my weekly "Tuesday poem" email list, check out the link here!
This year, as well, we lost Canadian poets David Phillips (1944-February 10, 2025), David Dowker (May 20, 1955 – March 24, 2025) and Judith Copithorne (1939-2025), and Canadian-American poet Larry Sawyer
(1970-2025).
The first half of the year had me attempting to close
out my two non-fiction projects—“the green notebook” and “the genealogy
book” [I’ve been posting excerpts-in-progress from both of these over at the substack for some time]—some two and a half years focusing on non-fiction prose, as spring into
summer moved me to focus on two new poetry manuscripts—“Fair bodies of unseen
prose” and “dream logic: poems from a Sunday prompt”—before
launching fully into a new poetry manuscript back in July, thanks to our adventures across Ireland: “The Museum of Practical Things” [see my write up on such here]. Oh, and the book of sentences (University of Calgary Press)
landed in October. I’ve had some nice write-ups on that.
Some further remarkable titles I caught this year included
Fast-Vanishing Speech: The 2023 Douglas Lochhead Memorial Book Arts Panel:
Jim Johnstone, Klara du Plessis and Christopher Patton (Kentville NS:
Gaspereau Press, 2024) [see my review of such here], Michael e. Casteels’ debut
novel, Furthermore, the Lake (Toronto ON: Guernica Editions, 2025) [see my review of such here], SPEECH DRIES HERE ON THE TONGUE: Poetry on Environmental Collapse and Mental Health, edited by Hollay Ghadery, Rasiqra
Revulva and Amanda Shankland (Guelph ON: The Porcupine’s Quill, 2025) [see my review of such here], Sadiqa de Meijer’s collection of essays In the Field
(Windsor ON: Palimpsest Press/Anstruther Books, 2025) [see my review of such here] and sophie anne edwards’ A Mouth of Vowels (Toronto ON: Guernica
Editions, 2025) [see my review of such here]. Via my substack, I’ve been
stretching out slightly longer reviews of prose titles, with a recent piece on Stephen
Collis’ Knock Down House (Pamenar Press, 2025) [see my essay here],
among others. I’ve also been posting short stories and other essays over there
as well. I keep telling myself I’m going to review further
journals, but only managed an issue of filling Station: filling
Station #84 : let slip the dogs.
Presuming my count is correct, I’ve posted some one
hundred and fifty-ish book reviews across 2025, the bulk of which on the blog,
but further at periodicities: a journal of poetry and poetics as well as
through Rob Manery’s SOME and Chris Banks’ The Woodlot: from
poetry books and chapbooks, anthologies, essay collections, novels, literary
journals, and further prose works. Is that all there is?
1. Joel Katelnikoff, Recombinant Theory: I’m
intrigued at Edmonton writer and critic Joel Katelnikoff’s Recombinant
Theory (Calgary AB: University of Calgary Press, 2024), a collection of
essays, of responses, to and through works by Lisa Robertson, Fred Wah, Lyn
Hejinian, Steve McCaffery, Sawako Nakayaso, Johanna Drucker, Charles Bernstein,
Annharte, ErÃn Moure and Christian Bök, each of which are done by repurposing
the authors’ own words. Set as chapter-sections, Katelnikoff repurposes each
writer’s words as a response to those same works, offering a way across the
work that is, in fact, through. In his own way, he turns their words back as a
mirror to themselves. “In short,” he writes, to open the ErÃn Moure
essay/section, “how can we be true to the way the brain works?” Katelnikoff’s
process has echoes of the way Klara du Plessis has been composing essays over
the past few years, specifically through her I’mpossible collab
(Kentville NS: Gaspereau Press, 2023): the critic is not removed from the
material but an essential part, offering the critic a way into the material
comparable to the creative non-fiction explorations through the 1970s and 80s
by writers such as Myrna Kostash and Brian Fawcett. Whereas du Plessis places
the critic directly into the material, Katelnikoff, instead, places the
criticism directly into the material, and the material discussed directly into
the criticism. Poets have been working elements of essay-poems for years—poets
such as Phil Hall, ErÃn Moure, Laynie Browne and the late Barry McKinnon, for
example—swirling across theory through the lyric, but Katelnikoff offers
critique through repurposing the language being critiqued, taking the process a
whole other level, writing essays from the inside. As he writes as part of the
acknowledgments: “All of the essays in this collection are written with the
permission of the writers whose textual materials have been recombined. In each
essays, the title, the section headers, and the sentences in the first section
are direct quotations from the writer’s textual corpus. All other sentences are
spliced together from diverse materials found throughout the corpus.” It’s a
fascinating process, and a fascinating read. See my full review here.

2. Matthew Gwathmey, Family Band: The third
full-length collection by Fredericton poet Matthew Gwathmey, following Our
Latest in Folktales (London ON: Brick Books, 2019) and Tumbling for
Amateurs (Toronto ON: Coach House Books, 2023), is Family Band
(Guelph ON: The Porcupines’ Quill, 2024). There’s long been a playfully-askance
approach Gwathmey has taken blending formal elements of lyric and narrative,
and this collection is no different, offering sharp lines across a folksy,
familial and detailed backdrop. “2022 is the year of the lilac,” he writes, to
open the poem “LILACS,” according to the almanac. // So tonight let’s walk the
trail behind our house. // To the bushes growing in very great plenty and
already divided. // Find an offshoot. Plant it in our side yard where it scent
can flourish / in the full sun. // Water and wait. We’ll alternate scions with
random grafts, // until its flowers appear at eye level, appearing just before
summer / comes into season, // blooms lasting only a couple weeks.” Through
short, sharp lyrics, Gwathmey swirls together a mixtape’s-worth of earworms and
experience, documenting road trips, birdwatching, visual art, nature walks and
playing music, a broadband of all that circles the domestic of family life,
rippling quietly outwards. “Savannah sparrows gather ten times / their weight
in detail to orchestrate / the ratio of land to water,” he writes, as part of
the lyric “BIRD CARTOGRAPHERS,” “call a light tsu. Caroline /
chickadees, cleaner edge of cheek patch, / mark dots of cities and dashes / of
contours using a broad palette.” I particularly enjoyed the triptych prose-poem
sequence “PHOTOGRAPHS OF BUILDINGS / BY DIANE ARBUS,” the first of which
begins: “Chimneys can’t push out but so much steam, even the outline’s unfocused
in blurry vapour. A quiet loosening of rigid matter. And how far they jut into
the postsecular project of this guy, the sky. Just imagine such alternatives.”
See my full review here.

3. Michael Boughn, THE BOOK OF UNCERTAIN BOOK 2:
I’ll admit I’ve seen but a scattering of titles by Toronto poet and critic
Michael Boughn over the years, from his incredible collection of essays, Measure’s
Measures: Poetry & Knowledge (Barrytown NY: Station Hill Press, 2024),
to poetry collection Great Canadian Poems for the Aged, Vol. 1 (Toronto
ON: BookThug, 2012), as well as the chapbook The Battle of Milvian Bridge
(shuffaloff, 2021), not to mention his chapbook In the shadows (2022)
that I produced through above/ground press. Whenever I do encounter his work,
I’m always curious why it hasn’t received more attention than it has, Boughn
somehow sitting as one of our unheralded senior Canadian poets and thinkers.
Wrapped together as eleven chapbook-sections and pamphlet coda is THE BOOK
OF UNCERTAIN BOOK 2 (2024), the first edition of which is produced in a
hand-numbered edition of twenty-five copies (mine is number twenty-five).
Subtitled “A Hyperbiographical Users Manual,” this book-length assemblage follows
THE BOOK OF UNCERTAIN BOOK 1 (Brooklyn NY: Spuyten Duyvil, 2022), and
extends across eleven sections, each of which are set in their own numbered
chapbook-binding. Boughn’s is an extended and packed lyric sentence of collaged
language, reference, sound and influx, a poetics reminiscent of Stephen Cain’s
recent Walking & Stealing (Book*hug Press, 2024) [see my review of
such here], but with a far denser language and heft of materials. “Midden heap
/ of nothing’s discarded remains,” he writes, in the first section of the
fourth poem-chapbook, “layer // after layer after layer has already / signified
more than decency would have / circulate in polite company , a normative
/ exclusionary sig-fix designed to keep power / well-contained and ordered
according / to bleach requirements […].” There is just so much happening, so
many simultaneous directions, to his ongoingnesses through these lines. See my full review here.

4. DM Bradford, Bottom Rail on Top: I’m just
now seeing a copy of Montreal-based poet and translator DM Bradford’s second
full-length collection, Bottom Rail on Top (Kingston ON: Brick Books,
2024), a follow-up to Dream of No One but Myself (Brick Books, 2021).
Composed across an accumulated thirteen poem-sections, from “rope to” and
“ashes to” to “new corps” and “lil chug,” the short poems of Bottom Rail on
Top exist as sketch-notes, lyric bursts that suggest the gesture but are
intricate and precise in their execution. As the back cover offers: “Somewhere
in the cut between Harriet Jacobs and surveillance, Southampton and sneaker
game, Lake Providence and the supply chain, Bottom Rail on Top sees D.M.
Bradford stage one personal present alongside American histories of antebellum
Black life and emancipation—a call and response between the complications of
legacy and selfhood.” There is a kind of call-and-response to how these poems
assemble, a through-line of notes and their commentary, akin to a kind of Greek
chorus or counter-narrative. Each section, a cluster of short sketch-poems,
with the occasional prose-commentary, providing a blend of further narrative,
additional information and a kind of summing-up, set at the end of a handful of
sections. The third section, “stock,” for example, ends with a prose block that
begins: “Not a poem but a succession of little cuts. You hear about Sally
Hemings over and over again. You don’t hear that much about Martha Jefferson,
Thomas Jefferson’s first wife, being Sally’s half-sister. You don’t hear much
about Betty Hemings, Martha’s father’s enslaved mistress, Sally’s mother. You
don’t hear much about the other half-siblings, how many of them Martha, along
with Thomas, inherited, the Hemings family among 135. Commonplace horrors.” Not
a poem, Bradford repeats as a mantra across the title of each poem and the
opening of each commentary, suggesting a push against the impossibility of the
lyric while simultaneously offering its artifice, even as the poems work
through and across it, connecting Bottom Rail on Top to works such as M
NourbeSe Philip’s Zong! (Toronto ON: The Mercury Press, 2008), for
example. “Not a poem,” Bradford writes, near the end of the fifth section, “but
to write at last / past the old place / one last time // by boat / the breeze
and the sunshine / north by fatherlands / ten days and ten nights [.]” See
my full review here.

5. Eva H.D., the natural hustle: poems: I’m
only seeing this now, Toronto poet Eva H.D.’s the natural hustle: poems
(Toronto ON: McClelland and Stewart, 2023), a collection that follows her
full-length debut, Rotten Perfect Mouth (Toronto ON: Mansfield Press,
2015) [see my review of such here] and collaborative art/photography volume
with photographer Kendall Townend, Light Wounds (2021). The poems that
make up the natural hustle offer an assemblage of declarative scenes; a
montage of moments wrapped around other moments, attending the immediate, it
would suggest, of both the author’s urban landscape and memory. “Every summer,”
she writes, as part of the poem “DONNA SUMMER,” “you entertain thoughts you’ve
had before; through / a sweating glass, lacerated with heat, consider //
whether there’ll ever be enough July, consider / the menu, the news from
Aleppo, the breathing/ Chablis. You misapprehend, fail to think through /
anything but your own righteous outrage, friends’ / afflictions, your partisan
posture.” Through H.D., the past and the present interact, intermingle and even
react, providing a suggestion that there are no singular moments, but those
that connect in loose sequence. Everything holds, somehow, and everything
connects. Composed as first-person narratives, these poems are rooted in
landscape, even across great distances, meditative swirls and the backlash of
recollection. “Back to the highway.” she writes, as part of the extended
sequence “GOD AND THE PATH TRAIN,” “Ramones doing their / Cretin hop
syncopations like a / bulimic mid-vomit like / this one song just has to
leave my body, / a car cuts us off so close it’s / practically driving
backwards. // Sunflower dust on everything.” See my full review here.

6. Em Dial, In the Key of Decay: I’m just now seeing a
copy of Toronto-based poet Em Dial’s full-length debut, In the Key of Decay
(Windsor ON: Palimpsest Press, 2024), a collection of lyrics held in monologue,
gesture. I’d seen Dial’s poems recently in Permanent Record: Poetics Towards
the Archive (New York NY: Nightboat Books, 2025) and was impressed,
although I’d even think their poem included in that particular anthology a
direction I’d like to see further. Their poems in this collection are a
narrative blend of performative and meditative, offering elements of beauty and
decay and everything between, amid and through, a collection, as the back cover
offers, that “pushes past borders both real and imagined to attend to those
failed by history.” “In my worst nightmares,” the poem “On Beauty” begins, “I
am pregnant / my body swelling out / with a demon but a small task to country. // Just as
when awake, I am begging / myself into a somewhere thumbing / my ribs for the definition
of country / other than the two blue passports / kissing in the desk drawer.”
The poems in In the Key of Decay are declarative, considered. In the
Key of Decay is a solid opening, and I’m intrigued by Dial’s formal
considerations, pushing against the boundaries of lyric constraint, but one
open to further possibilities (such as their poem in Permanent Record,
which does move into some really interesting structural territory). The poems
are smart and wild and restrained, offering elements of fantastic monologues
and short scenes and lines that lean into the musical. See my full review here.

7. Tea Gerbeza, How I Bend Into More: From Regina,
Saskatchewan poet Tea Gerbeza comes the full-length debut How I Bend Into
More (Windsor ON: Palimpsest Press, 2024), a collection that curves into
multiple articulations around childhood scoliosis, reminiscent of similar work
I’ve seen by Gatineau, Quebec filmmaker and poet Jennifer Mulligan, a poem or
two from her chapbook …like nailing jello to a tree… (above/ground
press, 2007). Through Gerbeza, much as Mulligan’s poems, a staggered line runs
down the centre of pages, of poems, composing a line of bent spine with text on
either side, offering visual approximations of “parentheses,” as Gerbeza’s poem
“glossary of parentheses” visualizes, “around my spine [.]” Constructed as
intimate notes on childhood illness, family response, suffering, privacy and
disability poetics, the poems are built on the foundations of the narrative
“I,” occasionally as curved or curled, writing a sequence of notes on effect,
response and experience. “I take a photo to post / instead find myself reading
pamphlets / about girls with Scoliosis. Images / tell me │ (
)ing helps the right / kind of patient, the right / patient will avoid /
surgery, this the body’s goal.” Across swirls and scatterings of cut-ups,
photographs, clippings and a staccato of scars, Gerbeza collages fragments of
text and image, leaning into the text-laden photographed object so prevalent in
the work of Toronto-based poet Kate Siklosi. Her lean might be visual, but the
foundation of the collection sits in text. “If I don’t exist Scoliosis doesn’t
either,” she writes. Further on: “I explore territory I’ve long kept private /
in crescents curled with no open centres [.]” What is interesting about
Gerbeza’s line, the visual of which runs through the collection as an
approximation, a textual stand-in for her own spine, is how it holds as
foundation through the collection, both through subject matter and text:
everything within the collection is set in relation to that single element. As
the poem “Clearing Up the Question about ‘My Suffering’” begins: “If suffering
is private │ then why should I explain? / if I explain, do I start from my head
│ to my toes [.]” She offers notes on the spine, so that she might write
through it, into it. See my full review here.

8. Oana Avasilichioaei, Chambersonic: Furthering the
evolution of Montreal poet, translator and performer Oana Avasilichioaei’s
explorations around sound, language, meaning and performance comes Chambersonic
(Vancouver BC: Talonbooks, 2024), her seventh-full length poetry title over
the past twenty years. Avasilichioaei’s work has moved from origins of
language, translation and between-ness into a poetics deeply engaged with the
intersections (within the between-ness, as well) of text, sound and
performance. “It begins with desire.” the section “Chambersonic : Soundpace //
Eavesdropping / on the Process of a Dilettante Composer,” subtitled “(on the
making of Chambersonic : Episodes for an Absent Film),” begins [with
back-slashes set here as included in the text, not as line-break notation], “A
longing for what is yet to be conceived. Faint and fragmentary glimmers of
ideas, sound heard in the mind’s ear: elongated resonances, long drawn-out
frequencies advancing and receding in waves, layers, reverberations // static,
silent extensions // sometimes sparse, sometimes full // a sea of glass, a more
active, rougher sea of surf and foam and wind // plucked chords // long vocal
vowellings fading into breathlessness.” Chambersonic is constructed as a
long poem across fifteen sections/scores, two bridges and an opening breath,
“Chambersonic Intro: Fellow Statements,” a poem subtitled “(an audio work &
lathe-cut vinyl / imagined from Fellow Statements, Fellow Murmurs, 04:48),” a
five stanza/prose block text that begins: “Breath The closing of the door
transforms the sound studio into a cocoon. / Soft light demarcates the edges,
while at the centre stands a simple install- / lation: a small table, chair,
recorder, and two vocal microphones. The outer / world seems unfathomably
distant in both time and space.” The scale of this project is impressive,
incorporating intervals, echoes, sound scores and layerings, as
Avasilichioaei’s Chambersonic not only holds the full-length collection
as her field of composition but one that incorporates sound and breath as
foundational, echoing off the boundaries of the physical object of the book.
“Voices will one day ignite and spill over,” she offers, to open the section
“Chambersonic : Echoes,” “fill in new fractures. They will not / retract but
keep on spilling.” See my full review here.

9. Monroe Lawrence, About to Be Young: I’m very taken
with this full-length debut, this book length poem, by Vancouver Island-born
Rhode Island-based poet Monroe Lawrence, About to Be Young (The
Elephants, 2021), a book that only recently landed on my doorstep. Going back
through my files, it is curious to realize that I’ve mentioned Lawrence once
before, as one of the winners of The Capilano Review’s sixth annual
Robin Blaser Poetry Award [see my note on such here], although there doesn’t
seem to be an acknowledgments of poems published elsewhere in the collection,
so I’m unable to tell if that winning poem included here. About to Be Young
is composed as a small, compact, fragmented and expansive book-length poem, set
as more accumulation than narrative, offering a fresh way of approach both the
lyric and the line through which the long poem is held. “Please, I felt broken
/ away, / Resisting to write out / in the other room,” they write, a third of
the way through the collection, “I could / held my book at my side, leaned /
Back / and cried [.]” There’s something of the larger structure, the syntax, of
this book-length lyric that leans closer to the French long poem tradition;
American poet and translator Cole Swensen is thanked in the acknowledgments,
which makes me suspect that the influence on Lawrence is a conscious one. The
lyric of About to Be Young seems far closer to the work of Emmanuel
Hocquard than to, say, the work of Robin Blaser, Robert Kroetsch or Jack
Spicer. “I cannot fit
inexpressiveness / Snowing my mouth,” Lawrence writes, offering moment
upon moment of sparkling grace. There’s a blend of abstract, large canvas and
lyric declaration he offers through these poems, one more focused on tone and
accumulation than straightforward thought. Each moment, stands; and
accumulates, into the sum of something greater, other. See my full review here.

10. Sean Howard, overlays: I’m fascinated by Cape
Breton poet Sean Howard’s latest poetry title, the deceptively-subtle and sleek
production of his wildly inventive overlays (Kentville NS: Gaspereau
Press, 2025), a book subtitled “( scored poems ),” with addendum “from Sea
Run: Notes on John Thompson’s Stilt Jack, by Peter Sanger.” The poems that
make up Howard’s overlays quite literally respond to the work and
structure of Nova Scotia poet, prose writer and critic Peter Sanger’s critical
monograph on the late John Thompson’s posthumous Stilt Jack (Toronto ON:
Anansi, 1978), a monograph originally published by Xavier Press in 1986 (a
“fully revised and expanded edition” appeared with Gaspereau Press in 2023). As
British Columbia poet Kim Trainor writes of the first edition of Sanger’s
monograph in a review on her blog back in March 2014, the book is “a meticulous
line by line commentary on Thompson’s Stilt Jack,” and Howard’s
collection holds to the structure and spirit of Sanger’s short work while
entirely dismantling the language. “Canada, still harrowing? Pen / knife (but
why?),” opens the poem “IX: SCRAPES,” “scraping star- // light from
stone. Keats’ cease / fire (so the world we shut // up…): negatives leave /
room for the dark. // Left standing, / children’s // voices / over // the
wall.” One might say that Howard’s project responding to Sanger’s text is very
meta, set as an homage to an homage, a response to a response, riffing off
Sanger writing on Thompson. “Key / note,” opens Howard’s “XXXV: GREENS,”
“silence’s / tonic: soon, a // plenty. History’s / dead aims: as Joyce // might
sway, gnaw- / ledge is dour…(Me- // thodically, Occam cuts / the
world shaving: High // Table, Apollo’s spoon / on the moon.)” The poems are
precise, playfully clipped and exact, seeking the moment within the moment,
within and around the boundaries of Sanger’s own possibilities, and Thompson’s
as well. Howard’s poems are precise, but packed with a density that is both
wildly propulsive and accumulative, offering a joyfully-jagged rhythm and
staccato that display him clearly having an enormous amount of fun across this
myriad of collaged lyrics. See my full review here.

11. Farah Ghafoor, Shadow Price: Award-winning
Toronto-based poet Farah Ghafoor’s full-length debut is Shadow Price
(Toronto ON: Anansi, 2025), a collection that wraps a first-person lyric around
temporality, death, capitalism and colonialism, and the dangers of not knowing
or understanding history. “The Present is reminded of its bones only when
broken,” she writes, as part of “Natural History Museum,” “and then the Future
is considered, its supposed desires / and plans. The Future, for whom the door
is always open, / a sweet wind blowing in petals and leaves, sticks and
feathers. / The same doorway through which the Present passes, / and forgets
what it was doing, its reasons why.” The movement and evolution of time is a
thread running through Ghafoor’s poems, articulating how it moves but in one
direction, however far one looks back. “I’ve been lying for a long time,” she
offers, to open “The Jungle Book: Epilogue,” “so let me tell you a story. /
Despite the bravado of the dog quaking before the wall, / we can never go back
to who we were.” Set in five sections—“SHADOW PRICE,” “TIME,” “THE LAST POET IN
THE WORLD,” “THE PLOT” and “THE GARDEN”—Ghafoor’s expansive and epic lyrics
offer shimmering narratives, flipping between the present and the past, the old
and the new, articulating time as something physical, something that can be
touched, held. Ghafoor is a natural storyteller, and her lyrics offer the
temperament of the ancient seer, able to discern what is long behind and ahead,
all that is hidden and all that is obvious; what others simply refuse to see,
if only they’d listen. “To obtain my severance package,” she offers, as part of
the extended lyric narrative of “The Whale,” “I will be required / to hold my
breath until further notice. / Of course, I can barely register all of this /
without the aural support that my insurance did not cover.” She weaves such
marvellous and magical tales, such gestures. “They have all the time in the
world,” she writes, as part of “The Jungle Book: Epilogue,” “but the story must
end, as all stories do.” This is an absolutely solid debut. See my full review here.

12. Terese Mason Pierre, Myth: I know there have been
many eager to see what Toronto writer and editor Terese Mason Pierre could do
through a collection beyond a chapbook, so it is good to see the release of her
full-length debut, Myth (Toronto ON: Anansi, 2025), a collection of
physical and precise poems on and around stories, storytelling and how stories
take hold. These are poems as foundational as the earth or the ocean, offering
sharp and astute first-person observational, declarative and descriptive lyrics.
“My grandfather says we can eat what we kill.” she begins, immediately setting
the tone with the opening line of the opening poem, “Fishing,” “We wade
into the water and find a shark.” Terese Mason Pierre’s poems tells stories,
including those that hint of their implications, meanings and true purposes. In
the end, myths are the stories we tell ourselves and each other, the stories
that warn, catch and inform, stories that can propel us forward, hold us back,
distract our attention or inform our world-view, including times when all of
the above occur simultaneously. “My mother tried to tell me I was broken,”
begins “Dead Living Things,” “and I shut her away. Who died and made her
oracle? / Where my mouth falters, my skin reserves.” Oh my, this is good. Myth
is a striking and deeply complex debut. See my full review here.

13. J.R. Carpenter, Measures of Weather: United
Kingdom-based Canadian poet J.R. Carpenter’s latest is Measures of Weather
(Swindon UK: Shearsman Books, 2025), a book that self-describes as a collection
“about more than just weather. What isn’t weather? Weather here is a stand-in,
for the elemental, the transitional, the ungovernable. And what does it mean to
measure?” The collection offers a suite of sharp lyrics, each holding titles
that echo off each other: “Of Fire,” “Of the Moon,” “Of Time,” “Of Witches,”
“Of Dew,” “Of Nothing.” There is something of the title-thread reminiscent of
what California poet Elizabeth Robinson has been working on for a while now,
such as in her Excursive (New York NY: Roof Books, 2023) and On
Ghosts (Solid Objects, 2013) [see my review of such here], to Anne Carson’s
infamous collection Short Talks (London ON: Brick Books, 1992), with
each Carson prose poem in the collection titled “Short talk on _____.” The
title-structure allows for a kind of ongoingness, an umbrella under which
anything might happen or occur, including threads that might relate to the
specifics of each title. For Carpenter, she offers a measurement beyond
immediate measurement, composing a sequence of lyric meditations on physical,
intellectual and even outer space and celestial bodies. “2 August 1786
// I want to trouble you / in absence,” the sequence “Of a New Comet” begins,
“with the following / imperfect account [.]” What is it about the weather? Lisa
Robertson composed The Weather (Vancouver BC: New Star Books, 2001)
while living in England, another Canadian poet in the UK writing her own
book-length lyric examination (a book Carpenter quotes at the opening of this
collection, also). “of magnifying and multiplying glasses,” Carpenter writes,
to open the sequence “Of Glass,” “I have neither studied /nor practiced [.]”
There is almost a way through which Carpenter utilizes Robertson’s The
Weather as a jumping-off point, providing a work that responds, in part, to
that classic title, but stretching that measure much further. Referencing time,
weather and space, this collection is a measure of measurement itself, seeing
how expansive one can explore through the smallest examination, the smallest
measure. “what is the real temperature / of bodies of a different nature / in
similar circumstances,” she writes, as part of the extended “Of Dew,” “of
bodies a little elevated / and similar bodies / lying on the ground //
sometimes bodies / having smooth surfaces / become colder in air [.]” In
pinpoint lyric, Carpenter offers a remarkable scaffolding that displays the
whole shape, showcasing the ease in which she can articulate her finely-tuned
lines, a movement of moments across conceptual space, time and motion. See my full review here.

14. Anna Veprinska, Bonememory: The full-length poetry
debut by Calgary-based poet and academic Anna Veprinska is Bonememory (Calgary
AB: University of Calgary Press, 2025), a collection of first person lyric
observations dealing with conflict, heartbreak and intimate loss. As the back
cover of the collection writes: “Memory is stored in the body. Memory sprouts
in families and is transmitted from one generation to the next. Memory imprints
at the level of bone.” This is a book of questions, and prayer, composed as
poems with clear, sharp edges that write of generations, distance and the body,
working through losses deeply felt, including that around immigration,
colonialism, chronic illness and other upheavals. “Gravesite / suggests
the dead are a site to behold,” she writes, as part of the poem “A goose lays
eggs on the side of a highway,” “and aren’t they?” Further on, the poem
“Testimony” offers: “Somewhere / there is a mouth generous // with opening. /
Each lip stirs // in service of its own / secrets.” Referencing the discovery
of unmarked graves on multiple sites across Canada of former residential
schools in the poem “Shoes,” she offers: “How much of this country is an
unmarked grave?” She ties these recently-held memorials and acknowledgments to
similar memorials at the Auschwitz museum, writing: “What comes from the
reification of metaphor?” She writes of pain, and the bewilderment of patterns,
repeating, all of which is held in the body. “Empathy,” the same poem
concludes, “the lie with whom wee sit making small talk / until decorum
dictates we can depart. / 215 Indigenous children. Makeshift memorials / of
children’s shoes coast to coast. / How much of this country is an unmarked
grave?” See my full review here.

15. Jake Byrne, Daddy: Poems: It is good to finally see
a copy of Toronto poet and editor Jake Byrne’s second collection, Daddy:
Poems (Kingson ON: Brick Books, 2024), following their full-length debut, Celebrate
Pride with Lockheed Martin (Hamilton ON: Wolsak and Wynn, 2023). Across a
loop and reloop of articulated, traced and repuporsed trauma, Byrne’s poems
offer a curious blend of sexual swagger, explorations through and into
“patriarchy, intergenerational trauma, and queer desire” (as the back cover offers),
and a degree of tenderness, including the very fact of the author dedicating
the collection “to the memory of a little cat / named My Sweet Princess
(2018-2023).” The poems assembled here are expansive, allowing for this large
project built out of intricately-crafted small parts, opening with a poem of
short lines held aloft by such wide open space. “My father calls to talk about
my poems,” Byrne writes, offering a four-line stanza at the top of an otherwise
empty page, “and seamlessly incorporates my words into his paranoid delusions.
/ He says I ought to be more careful what I write, implies the poems / come
from a demon birthing itself through the vessel of my body.” This is Byrne in a
further step of moving beyond composing poems to composing books, something
already evident in the umbrella of Celebrate Pride with Lockheed Martin,
a structure that encompassed the entirety of the poems in that collection, but Daddy:
Poems provides a more overt and more coherent book-length structure; and
the coherence is further impressive through the assemblage of a variety of
lyric shapes and purposes. “My parents taught me many things the hard way.” the
poem “A POEM ABOUT MY PET CANARY II” offers, “But I cannot for the life of me
recall / what the moral of this lesson was. // Do poems require moral lessons?”
There’s a vibrancy to Byrne’s lyric, whatever the subject matter; an energy
that can’t be denied, making for a powerful collection on trauma, desire and
how one might move forward, even through the flailing, a flailing that might
hopefully find its way toward something more stable, certain. “sometimes you
know / by the crackle of static in the air,” begins the poem “event coordinator
moving into / project management,” “the vibrations in the puddles / on the sopping
sauna floor. / i had so rarely felt the virtues of a / tall white man before
marco.” See my full review here.

16. Tolu Oloruntoba, Unravel: The third
full-length poetry title by award-winning poet Tolu Oloruntoba, following The
Junta of Happenstance (Windsor ON: Palimpsest Press, 2021) and Each One
a Furnace (Toronto ON: McClelland and Stewart, 2022), is Unravel
(McClelland and Stewart, 2025). There is a powerful navigation Oloruntoba works
through his lyric first-person narratives, offering deeply thoughtful
meditations on all that might be called location. “Shrill bullets, sheep
ballet, this hobble:,” he offers, as part of the poem “OF PASSPHRASES STRONGER
THAN 4 WORDS WITH / 1,000 ITERATIONS,” “I still cannot pronounce shibboleth. /
I wanted into the cult of ikigai like nothing // before or since. If I had been
so punished, / then I must have been righteous, and my reward / must have
waited.” These poems attempt placement, attempting to best situate his
thinking, and articulate how he sees the chaos and beauty of the world through
his engagements through, as Reginald Dwayne Betts suggests, as part of his back
cover blurb, “the intersections of identity, migration, fatherhood, and
history.” These are poems about how best one might move through the world,
despite and even because of all it contains, both without and within. These are
poems on perspective: “You’d consider that map / upside-down,” he writes, as
part of “MAGIC LAND OF THE SHADOWS,” “but only because / you believe Europe
belongs on top.”Oloruntoba
offers deep attention to the smallest moments, small things, which allow for
larger revelation; the only way, perhaps, to get there from here. “I have been
troubling / the shoreline,” he writes, as part of the poem “EKPHRASIS,” “as
cryptids do.” There is an informed and steady progress of thought across
Oloruntoba’s lyric, deeply considered and gestural; wise and empathetic, even
as he unravels—as to reveal, and not to pull apart, damage or dismantle—his own
observations for the sake of further insight. “We / who are at our most human
when / we are yearning.” he writes, as part of “DEMONSTRO,” “My Cain-mark, your
/ Cain-mark, shows even, especially / in this gropesome dark.” See my full review here.
17. Zane Koss, Country Music: Guelph, Ontario-based
poet and translator Zane Koss’ second full-length collection, following Harbour
Grids (Picton ON: Invisible Publishing, 2022) is Country Music
(Invisible Publishing, 2025), a book-length poem of stories, ghosts and the
country music of rural British Columbia upbringing. It is a very different tone
and approach from, say, the music of Dennis Cooley’s Country Music: New
Poems (Kalamalka Press, 2004) or Robert Kroetsch’s “Country and Western”
section of his Completed Field Notes (University of Alberta Press,
2002). As the back cover offers, Koss’ music emerges from stories told around
campfires or the kitchen table, held “against the backdrop of rural British
Columbia,” offering working-class tales of “humour and violence of life in the
mountains.” Koss weaves these stories through and around the shape of an
understanding of his own origins, and how he got to where he is now. As he
writes, early in the collection: “where have our fathers / gone i have still
lived more years / of my life // on a dirt road than a / paved one, / i tell
people that, and // though true, it
doesn’t / feel that way; mike, / where have we gone [.]” He opens the book, the
poem, with a sequence of storytelling narratives to establish his foundation of
a good story, plainly told; conversational, sections of which feel comparable
to The Canterbury Tales, but all told by the same unnamed narrator. The
poems, the extended long poem, of Country Music, is structured in
accumulating sections, offering short narrative bursts of storytelling lyric,
notational across the pause and parry across each storyteller’s particular
diction. See my full review here.

18. Adam Haiun, I Am Looking for You in the No-Place Grid: The
full-length debut by Montreal poet Adam Haiun is the intriguing I Am Looking
for You in the No-Place Grid (Toronto ON: Coach House Books, 2025), a book
of lines, grids and shapes set across each other in lengths. I might imagine
that if the late Canadian poet and dramatist Wilfred Watson (1911-1998), once
famous for his own grid poems (but more enduringly well-known as being the
husband of writer Sheila Watson), had been able to shake Modernism, he might
have emerged as Adam Haiun. I Am Looking for You in the No-Place Grid
offers a long poem sketchbook of narrative threads set in overlapping text,
overlapping grids, moving in multiple directions simultaneously, and
deliciously difficult to replicate in the form of a review (although I shall
make an attempt). “And where am I to / be found in this equation.” he writes,
early on in the assemblage of untitled pieces, set in the table of contents as
a listing of first lines demarking self-contained pieces, twenty-one in all.
“The head the hindquarters intact / the heart presumably obliterated / if any
logic governs the placement / of organs. And you only notice / today how there
are little grey / apartments above that grocery / store. The miniaturizing
impulse. / In terms of the heart. In relation / to the glands. All the pungency
/ of the ripe orange in the stairwell / and the recognition of the smell / as
belonging to her very pits. The / stretch of land that constitutes a / lesson
from out of the past. The / engorgement.” The author’s note at the end of the
collection—“Although I wrote this book in the voice of a digital speaker, I
employed no generative software in its composition.—suggests a kind of
polyvocality of not just overlapping text but overlapping sound, furthering
structural echoes of some of the work of Montreal poet, translator and
performer Oana Avasilichioaei’s own explorations around sound, language,
meaning and performance, most recently through her seventh full-length
collection, Chambersonic (Vancouver BC: Talonbooks, 2024) (although
there are numerous over the years that have played with an overlapping of text,
certainly, from Chris Turnbull to bpNichol to jwcurry, among others). Haiun’s
overlapping sentences and phrases play the glitch and stagger, overlay and
staccato of fragments across a far broader tapestry of construction and
destruction, how things are built and how they fall apart. Every sentence a
further step across an endless stretch of narrative across the length and breath
of the long poem, as he writes, mid-way through the collection: “The head the
hindquarters intact / the heart presumably obliterated / if any logic governs
the placement / of organs. And you only notice / today how there are little
grey / apartments above that grocery / store. The miniaturizing impulse. / In
terms of the heart. In relation / to the glands. All the pungency / of the ripe
orange in the stairwell / and the recognition of the smell / as belonging to
her very pits.” See my full review here.

19. Mahaila Smith, Seed Beetle: poems: The
full-length poetry debut by Ottawa-based poet Mahaila Smith, following two
chapbooks, including one through above/ground press, is Seed Beetle: poems
(Hamilton ON: Stelliform Press, 2025), a speculative collection set as an
assembled manuscript composed well into an imagined future. “I found the
following material in notebooks and desk drawers,” the “Foreword” begins, “in
blog posts and hard drives during the process of creating the Nebula Armis
fonds in the years following her passing. An archive of her poems is now housed
in the Chamberlin Collection of Poetry of the Toronto Public Library.” The
“Foreword,” by the way, by the fictional “Dip Seshadri,” is dated “New Haywood,
2102.” The most overt comparison to this collection would be the full-debut by
Toronto poet and filmmaker Lindsay B-e, The Cyborg Anthology: Poems
(Kingston ON: Brick Books, 2020), a collection of poems by robot poets put
together some two hundred years in the future, or even the way the late Robert
Kroetsch wrote the fictional archivist Raymond assembling the work of a lost
poet and her work, The Hornbooks of Rita K. (Edmonton AB: University of
Alberta Press, 2001). Set in three sections, Nebula’s poems write of repeated
layers of death and rebirth, technological advance and environmental crises,
utopia and its failures. The narrative framework of this imagined future is
curious, interesting; and I’m intrigued at why, specifically, Smith wrote out
this future through the lyric as opposed to prose; wondering, perhaps, if there
might be a novelization at some point from an alternate perspective around the
same narrative this collection offers. Held together, the poems each provide
narrative moments of lyrically-straightforward narrative sketches that together
accumulate into a larger and broader concern with how technology interferes
with repair, and has the potential to interfere with utopia itself. Nebula’s
poems offer depictions of days and networks, beetles and histories, and fingers
through dirt; as a warning, a look at and through where we might land from the
perspective of having been through it. See my full review here.

20. Jessica Bebenek, No One Knows Us There: Poems: The
full-length poetry debut by Montreal-based poet Jessica Bebenek, following
eight chapbooks, as well as landing on the shortlist the Writers’ Trust of
Canada RBC Bronwen Wallace Award for Emerging Writers, is No One Knows Us
There: Poems (Toronto ON: Book*hug Press, 2025), a collection
self-described as one that “presents two distinct and moving portraits of
womanhood. The first is that of the devoted, caregiving granddaughter
navigating hospital hallways and the painful realities of palliative care. The
second is that of a woman a decade older, compassionately looking back on her
younger self. In this second half, Bebenek rewrites poems from the first,
honouring unimaginable loss and turning it into genuine healing.” And there is
such grief, such loss, here. Bebenek’s narrator works through grief as it is
happening, and, again, years later, revisiting what can’t help but shift
through the intervening time. Part of what will be interesting through Bebenek’s
further and future work will be seeing how such a lyric will develop, given an
opening salvo that already seeks to articulate loss from two temporal
perspectives. This is a strong collection, one that holds to foundations even
as Bebenek’s narrator works to comprehend, to clarify, all that has happened
and her origins, and all where she might eventually land. Early on in the
collection, there is the poem “On the Night of the Morning / My Grandfather
Died,” with all the immediacy such an event might provide, as the poem ends:
“But there is no fall. / We went home. / Chose one board / and then another, /
one street and walked down it, / screeching with the thing / that made us.” See my full review here.

21. Michael Chang, Things a Bright Boy Can Do: From
Manhattan-based Canadian poet and editor Michael Chang, following titles such
as Heroes (Temz Review/845 Press, 2025), Toy Soldiers (Action,
Spectacle, 2024), SWEET MOSS (Anstruther Press, 2024), SYNTHETIC JUNGLE (Northwestern University Press, 2023) and EMPLOYEES
MUST WASH HANDS (GreenTower Press, 2024), is the full-length Things a
Bright Boy Can Do (Toronto ON: Coach House Books, 2025). I’m all With
chapbooks produced over the past two years through Temz Review/845 Press and
Anstruther Press, as well as an author biography that cites publication in
Canadian journals such as Capilano Review, Contemporary Verse 2,
the Ex-Puritan, The Malahat Review and PRISM International,
Canadian literature is certainly paying attention to Michael Chang, as much as
Michael Chang seems to be attending Canadian publishers; perhaps a return north
is being considered? On the surface, the poems in Chang’s Things a Bright
Boy Can Do are accumulative, whip-smart, hurt and funny, sassy and queer,
comparable in many ways to the work of New England-based poet and editor Chen
Chen, speaking first-person lyric monologues around emergencies and histories,
childhood recollection and literary interveavings, violence and linguistic
measure, cultural references and expansive gestures. “i detect your silence,”
Chang writes, as part of “ATONEMENT,” “you you practiced // personification of
ALLURE // fresh face pummelled red & teal // according to that distant
sheepdog narcissa [.]” There is the sass, the casual glance and gesture of the
deeply felt, deeply considered; the highly-literature “flirty to righteousness,
wrathful to lackadaisical,” providing an echo between the two, but in Chang,
something different, as well: something looser, almost freer, allowing for the
movement of the gesture to direct the narratives. “Matthew DICKMAN was so upset
he could not stand,” the expansive and gestural “BABY DRIVE SOUTH” writes,
“Michael DICKMAN was investigated by another agency due to / a conflict of
interes // Paul MULDOON told you his horse was larger than yours // CACONRAD
sent anthrax to Betsy DeVos & was
awarded / the Medal of Freedom [.]” At turns thoughtful, joyful, meditative and
silly, Things a Bright Boy Can Do offers a perspective on how one might
live best and simply be within the world, within the moment, whatever else
might be happening or happened, or even yet to happen. Or, as the poem “KING OF
THE WORLD” writes, just at the end: “on this day // we go back to our old
routine [.]” See my full review here.

22. Jessica Popeski, The Problem with Having a Body: Following the
chapbooks The Wrong Place (Toronto ON: Anstruther Press, 2015 )
and Oratorio (Anstruther Press, 2015) comes Toronto-based “dis/abled
opera singer, Professor of English, Creative Writing, and Music, and
internationally published, intersectional ecofeminist poet” Jessica Popeski’s
full-length poetry debut, The Problem with Having a Body (Guelph ON:
Gordon Hill Press, 2025). As the back cover offers, this is a collection of
poems “that unites Jessica Popeski’s preoccupations with intersectional
ecofeminism, epigenetics, and the inheritance of fractured, grandmaternal
generational lines. It reconciles private and public conflicts, examining how
political and geographical rupture and war zones generate traumatic, ancestral
memory by chronicling experiences of moving through the world with dis/ability
and anorexia. Accompanied by the insistence of matrilineal song, these poems
ask loud questions about cyclical bouts of anxiety and depression, madness,
illness, voicelessness, and disordered eating.” The poems in The Problem
with Having a Body hold a precise measure of descriptive nuance; offering
precise rhythm, hush, halt and flow. “when it rains it drizzles ceaselessly,”
the short sequence “flatline” begins, “so everything gets soaked / in my dreams
i sleep / until six // ribs are scaffolding / stretch skin like cellophane /
over leftovers [.]” Popeski writes through narratives of illness and the body,
and matrilineal lines; of long-term dis/ability, wrapping her subject matter
tight around the provocations of the book’s title, and the title poem, that
offers: “the problem with having a / body is you have to carry // it everywhere
with you. / mine has held the curlicue / of three babies & still // i’ve no
one to show for it; / a hoard of manila medical // files cramped &
yellowing.” See my full review here.

23. Karen Solie, Wellwater: poems: The latest by
award-winning Canadian poet and editor Karen Solie, following Short Haul
Engine (London ON: Brick Books, 2001), Modern and Normal (Brick
Books, 2005), Pigeon (Toronto ON: Anansi, 2009), The Road In Is Not
the Same Road Out (Anansi, 2015), The Living Option: Selected Poems
(Northumberland UK: Bloodaxe Books, 2013) and The Caiplie Caves (Anansi,
2019), is Wellwater: poems (Anansi, 2025). Solie is a curiosity in
Canadian poetry, one of the few poets of her (our) generation that sees broader
attention in other counties, with books and journal publications regularly in
the United Kingdom (including a selected published there, for example), and her
work has, over the years, won the Dorothy Livesay Poetry Prize, Pat Lowther
Award, Trillium Book Award and the Griffin Poetry Prize, as well as been
shortlisted for the Derek Walcott Prize and the T.S. Eliot Prize. She’s also a
Guggenheim Fellow, which make for an even shorter list across Canadian
poetry—the only other examples I can think of are A.L. Moritz, Tim Bowling and
Anne Carson. And all of this done, of course, with a quiet and modest
confidence across the depths of a Saskatchewan lyric. Solie is very good at
crafting a scene with intricate nuance and unexpected turns, whether image or
narrative, and this collection offers poems that hold to the tight image-scene,
with others that open up across the narrative a bit more, allowing air through
the lines across a greater narrative and lyric distance. There is almost a kind
of restlessness articulated through these poems, with an inability to remain
still even across multiple poems on and around stillness, but rarely in the
same geography, the same moment, beyond that aforementioned Saskatchewan (and
Toronto, I’ve noticed). The poems, together, cite a restlessness, or perhaps a
curiosity, perpetually seeking to reach across another horizon to seek a better
understanding of what might be out there, whether through moments across
geography, or even across the narrator’s own past. It it the clarity, one
suspects, she seeks. “An empty bottle rolled under the passenger seat / and
back out again // as my grandfather drove,” the poem “DUST” writes, “one foot
on the gas, one on the brake, // it was a clear glass bottle with white
lettering, / and a sense of the conditional crept in through the vents // like
dust, the incense of the road / scrubbing the air of clarity, of all eels but
the demands of dust, // what you need replaced / with what you don’t – you are
ignored // by everything as you struggle with it.” It is through, one might
suggest, these moments together, that we might best know and appreciate these
poems. See my full review here.

24. Jessi MacEachern, Cut Side Down: The latest
from Montreal-based poet and scholar Jessi MacEachern, following A Number of
Stunning Attacks (Picton ON: Invisible Publishing, 2021), is Cut Side
Down (Invisible Publishing, 2025), a playful, polyphonic study through sexy
and indelible poems on and around reading, influence and how far one might fall
into text. “My inkpot finally ceased blushing.” the poem “The Eighteenth
Century Is Silent,” begins. “With the heavenly hierarchy / I dipped my pen. / I
told my fellow poets we were only the bodies / of ghosts following birds of the
heart.” Bending body and line, Cut Side Down is structured with an
introductory poem and a triptych of poem sections: “RAVISHING THE SEX INTO THE
HOLD,” “DO I ENJOY THE WORK?” and “WHEN A FOLK, WHEN A SPRAWL,” an earlier
version of which appeared as an above/ground press chapbook. “Start here
with the cut edges of the book.” the introductory and untitled open poem
begins, “They are standing at attention for you.” MacEachern sweeps
through a cadence of evocative sound and gesture, offering a poetic focused on
twirling lyric expectation, reordering words and expectation. “My inkpot
finally ceased blushing. / With the heavenly hierarchy / I dipped my pen.” the
first section’s opening poem, “The Eighteenth Century Is Silent,” begins. “I
told my fellow poets we were only the bodies / of ghosts following birds of the
heart.” There is such sprawl, such open joy across these gestures. “Absence is
no thing / to mourn.” she writes, to close the poem “Cunt Was Her Favourite
Word,” “It feeds / our immortality.” Through a delight of bustling solitude,
MacEachern blends the immediate of a first-person lyric gymnastics with
appearances by Lorine Niedecker, Charles Olson, Virginia Woolf and Renee Gladman,
each writer present in the text because their writing remains so present, all
blended into MacEachern’s swoops and swirls and contained mayhem. See my full review here.

25. Kyo Lee, i cut my tongue on a broken country: I’m very taken
with the clear and resolute first-person lyrics of Waterloo, Ontario-based Kyo
Lee’s full-length poetry debut, i cut my tongue on a broken country
(Vancouver BC: Arsenal Pulp Press, 2025), especially given, as her author
biography offers, Lee “is the youngest winner of the CBC Poetry Prize and the
youngest finalist for the RBC Bronwen Wallace Award.” Youth, it would seem, is
a featured selling point for this collection, and Lee’s poems offer a reaching,
a searching, but one already thick with knowing, speaking a wisdom already
gathered along through her years like moss. “Van Gogh did not eat yellow paint
to get happiness inside him.” she writes, as part of the poem “can you be a
poet & be happy?,” “He ate it to kill himself. / I want to smear paint all
over myself / & then fall from the sky. Colourful monsoon. / Art is not
because of but in spite of pain. / I want to believe this. / But yesterday I
started writing poetry again / & stockpiled single-use razors under my
bed.” The poems are wise and propulsive, and I’m impressed by the clear
confidence with which she speaks through all that she is working to figure out,
against what she already knows, and works to articulate. “The train back from
Seoul. / The world outside is turning green,” the poem “Field Notes from Time”
begins, “& time is slowing down. The sun is lower here // & we run west
to beat it to its end.” The cover copy for the collection offers that this
“intimate debut poetry collection is simultaneously a vulnerable confession and
a micro study of macro topics including lineage, family, war, and hope. It
explores the Asian American diaspora, queerness, girlhood, and the
relationships between and within them, pushing and pulling on the boundaries of
identity and language like a story trying to tell itself.” There is an enormous
amount of activity running and rushing through this collection, and Lee has a
remarkably good handle on it all. These are thoughtful and compelling poems,
carefully considered and wonderfully smart and curious, providing intimate
confession, lyric gesture, meditation and monologue, and, when required,
playful, sassy and savage turns across some complex and even difficult terrain.
As Lee writes as part of “out of the blue”: “There are some proverbs in Korean
/ that i wish to not remember in English.” This is a collection of youth and
knowing and swagger and unknowing and wisdom and seeking, of asking questions
and searching for answers amid the wreckage. This is an impressive debut by a
new voice I look forward very much to hearing more from. See my full review here.

26. Cecily Nicholson, Crowd Source: The fifth
full-length poetry title by Vancouver poet Cecily Nicholson, following Triage
(Vancouver BC: Talonbooks, 2011), From the Poplars (Talonbooks,
2014), Wayside Sang (Talonbooks, 2017), which won the Governor General’s
Award for Poetry, and HARROWINGS (Talonbooks, 2022), is Crowd Source
(Talonbooks, 2025). According to the back cover, Crowd Source “parallels
the daily migration of crows who, aside from fledging season, journey across
Metro Vancouver every day at dawn and dusk. Continuing Nicholson’s attention to
contemporary climate crisis, social movements, and Black diasporic relations,
this is a text for all concerned with practicing ecological futurities
benefitting corvid sensibilities.” Held as a book-length suite in thirteen
numbered lyric sections, Nicholson’s extended, expanded sequences are stitched
through fragment and ongoingness, stretching a single line along a book-length
thread. “to realize what’s common / pause for the count / and continuity / keep
time,” begins the seventh section, “blackbirds are common / in the thousands /
mythical / about this femme’s feet [.]” She speaks of crows and through crows,
setting all else to a foundation of corvids across spaces occupied and altered
by human activity. Nicholson’s lyrics, her small points and moments, accumulate
across great distances, holding each moment in relation. Nicholson articulates
relation and interrelation, offering the myriad ways in which elements of the
world connect together, held in place, at least here, in language, from
climate, capitalism and human occupation, all seen through the wisdom of crows.
“one of the greatest spectacles / the city ever sees,” she writes, to open the
ninth section, “twice daily most seasons / dawn to dusk in lotic spectacle //
quantum listening / with an innate sense of numbers // contours sensing a line
/ between the earth’s magnetic field // synthesized de novo surviving /
billions of years as memories / stored in cells [.]” She writes blackbirds and
grackles, crows and Vancouver’s SkyTrain, weaving quoted language into such
meditative lengths as a kind of day book, riffing off moments and sources, crow
activity and colonial impact. See my full review here.

27. Junie Désil, allostatic load: The second
full-length collection by British Columbia poet Junie Désil, following eat
salt │ gaze at the ocean (Vancouver BC: Talonbooks, 2020), is allostatic
load (Talonbooks, 2025), a collection titled after a term coined by Bruce
McEwen and Eliot Stellar in 1993, referring specifically to the wear and tear
on the body that accumulates as an individual is exposed to repeated or chronic
stress. As the cover copy informs, the poems in this collection navigate “the
racialized interplay of chronic wear and tear during tumultuous years marked by
global racial tensions, the commodification of care, and the burden of
systematic injustice,” specifically one that seeks to “hold the vulnerability
and resilience required to navigate deep healing in a world that does not wish
you well […].” Across detailed, intimate and meditative lyric stretches, Désil
offers first-person explorations and exhaustions across the difficulties of
navigating not only her own particular wear, but a medical system determined to
undermine her experiences. As she writes as part of the poem “in the doctor’s
office,” near the opening of the collection: “when i look at you / and
people of your ethnicity // i would say you should / start on
Metformin. // scrawls on her notepad she /tells me have a think.”
Throughout, Désil attends the long line, the ongoing thought, one that extends
within and between each poem, less a narrative than a sweep, a suite, a flow. Set
with single-poem “prologue I” (“searching for indicators”) and three numbered
section-clusters of poems—“allostatic load,” “weathering” and “medicine”—the
first two sections holding a single-poem “prologue II” (“Coping Like John
Henry”) between them, offering a suite of poems in slow build, a spread-out and
accumulative description of stress, excess, medical complications and stressful
interactions before the eventul emergence into something that might provide
salve. This collection asks: What does care look like through such perpetual
onslaught on the senses? How might care even be possible? “when the
medical-office assistant ushers me down the hall,” begins “on my Nth visit to
yet another medical professional,” “and asks me to get on the scale / it fails
to tell her that the number reflects / the cares i neglect to dispense, /
emails i forgot to dispatch – including the ones sitting / rent-free in my
brain, the owed return phone calls, / and text messages, and emails, and
to-dos, / and 252 open tabs, and / unfinished conversations settling in my
chest, / on my hips, in my thighs. i eat my feelings / because it’s
unacceptable to have them, no that’s not / true. i portion control my emotions
and keep / my mouth busy so as not to earn the angry Black woman /
badge.” See my full review here.

28. Hajer Mirwali, Revolutions: The full-length poetry
debut by Hajer Mirwali, “a Palestinian and Iraqi writer living in Toronto,” is Revolutions
(Vancouver BC: Talonbooks, 2025), a collection that the back cover writes
“sifts through the grains of Muslim daughterhood to reveal two metaphorical
circles inextricably overlapping: shame and pleasure. In an extended
conversation with Mona Hatoum’s artwork + and –, Revolutions asks
how young Arab women – who live in homes and communities where actions are
surveilled and categorized as 3aib or not 3aib, shameful or acceptable – make
and unmake their identities.” Composed as a book-length suite, this collections
weaves and interleaves such wonderful structural variety, offering a myriad of
threads that swirl around a collision of cultures, and a poetics that draws
from artists and writers such as Mahmoud Darwish, ErÃn Moure, M. NourbeSe
Philip, Naseer Shamma and Nicole Brossard, writing tales of mothers and
daughters; and how one self-edits, keeps hidden, and also provides comfort,
solidarity. “Yes,” Mirwali writes, as part of the poem “January 23,” “a very
good daughter who loves / her motherlands and her God. // A daughter more or
less. // A daughter + and –. // Never the same twice.” What becomes fascinating
is in how all of these moments that Mirwali articulates connect across
distances, moving from collage into coherence, writing the interconnectedness
between each of these disparate narrative threads. As she writes as part of the
section “BORDER TONGUE”: “Sand in an hourglass falls in concentric circles
until the space is filled then reaches back to where it fell from. I take
photos of the camera’s small screen send them to Baba in Iraq.” She writes of
multiple points of departure and relationships to people, to individuals, to
geographies and geopolitical crises; she writes of home, of hearth. She writes
of the contradictions of where the heart may go and how one connects to the
world, seeking solace and urgency, a connection to where part of her might
always remain. See my full review here.

29. Amy LeBlanc, I used to live here: The second
full-length collection by Calgary poet Amy LeBlanc, following I know
something you don’t know (Guelph ON: Gordon Hill Press, 2020), is I used
to live here (Guelph ON: The Porcupine’s Quill, 2025), “an examination of
chronic illness, disability, and autoimmunity.” On the surface, I used to
live here might seem to hold echoes of ” Guelph poet Jessica Popeski’s The
Problem with Having a Body (Guelph ON: Gordon Hill Press, 2025), but both are, instead, part of an expanding wealth of
titles that connect through a conversation around “disability poetics,” a
conversation that Gordon Hill/The Porcupine’s Quill has been deliberately
working to expand for some time. Across a quartet of first-person
lyrics—section titles set as “The Leech House,” “Sympathetic Magic,” “Something
in the Water” and “Copse, Corpse, Catastrophe”—LeBlanc’s poems sit amid
tightness and looseness, providing carved lines the space through which they
might properly breathe. The gestures of LeBlanc’s second full-length collection
write through witches, Shakespeare’s Juliet, Hecate’s daughter, Anne Boleyn,
and even Gwen Stacy (Spider-Man’s girlfriend, infamously killed by Willem
Dafoe’s Green Goblin in the 2014 flick Spider-Man 2, but in the original
books way back in 1973) in the poem “Gwen Stacy,” that begins: “The night Gwen
died, / the Bow River
flooded / knocked / over / signs,
taxi cabs, dog leashes
turned loose / along the tide.” She writes of historical and fictional women
not allowed their own agency, beyond their associations to others. Or on
illness metaphors, as through the poem “Counterpoints to / illness metaphors,”
seeking an updated language to reframe or reshape a sequence of experiences too
long misunderstood, dismissed or outright ignored. “Not an alarm clock,” she
writes, “a car with two doors / strip mall / inverted heart [.]” That does seem
to be the crux of this collection: seeking a new language to reshape and
reframe perception around this particular lived experience; finding a new way
to speak on illness and disability, for the sake of a far better understanding
of what has so often been compartmentalized as either imaginary or invisible.
LeBlanc wishes you, the reader, to better understand from the inside what
you’ve only seen so far from the outside. See my full review here.

30. Jeff Derksen, Future Works: Very good to see a copy
of Future Works (Vancouver BC: Talonbooks, 2025), the latest poetry
title by Jeff Derksen, a poet, critic and professor who currently divides his
time between Vancouver and Vienna, Austria, and who emerged across those heady
days of 1970s and 80s language-exploration through and around The Kootenay
School of Writing (originating in Nelson, British Columbia’s David Thompson
University Centre, relocating to Vancouver when the government shut David
Thompson down in 1984), blending language experimentation with and through
social and political commentary. Following poetry titles including Until
(1987), Down Time (Talonbooks, 1989), Dwell (Talonbooks, 1994), Transnational
Muscle Cars (Talonbooks, 2003) and The Vestiges (2014), Derksen’s Future
Works offers a heft of references and lines and commentaries stitched
together as a rush of a shape, a coherent mass of accumulated texts that form
the structure of his poems. “Ants close down the North American banking system
with / a highly coordinated strike on ATMs: over New Year’s Eve, / individual
bills are carried out of the machines,” he writes, as part of the extended
opening poem, “MORE THAN HUMAN LABOUR,” “moved along / predetermined routes,
and stashed in complex underground / networks. Two ants are captured but refuse
to five up their / comrades. In solidarity, they eat each other.” More power in
union, one might say. There’s playfulness to Derksen’s serious poems, one with
a wry glance across what might otherwise seem serious, dark or even absurd. “I
was working in a gas station,” the prose piece “MY SHORT NOVEL” begins, “a
greenhouse, in delivery, in gardening, in editing, in teaching, in
administration. The weather has a new name and it is no longer adorable.” The
distance of time since his prior collection was published offers a slightly
different perspective on his ongoing work, providing a reminder at just how
much the structure and poetics of Canadian (Calgary, Vancouver, Toronto,
Edmonton, Calgary) poet ryan fitzpatrick’s work really has evolved and been
influenced by poets such as Jeff Derksen [see my review of ryan fitzpatrick’s
latest collection here], both poets presenting moments and meaning through the
context and collision of moments and references into and across each other; how
ideas of capital, labour, language and capitalism relate and interrelate across
layerings and collage of direct statements. “My hard edge paintings / are a
list / of demands,” begins Derksen’s poem “MY HARD EDGE PAINTINGS, a poem
subtitled “after Pierre Coupey,” “or plans where colour / rushes into /
our kinetic future / on a hard-to-observe land / to so-called light / upon in
the shadows / under the cover / of canvas, an advance / like walking out / into
the city [.]” There is a curious way that Derksen’s approach engages ethics and
perspective, offering an alternate way of realizing the lyric, one that speaks
of late capitalism and global war zones, future climate catastrophes and
contemplative wit across what might otherwise appear as a collage of
references, laid end to end, built to produce something far larger and ongoing.
“or the most beautiful thing / may be the space you make / it as you imagine it
/ conceived built inhabited altered,” he writes, to close the poem “THE MOST
BEAUTIFUL THING,” “by an encounter that swerves / to what is possible / an act
an action / an unscripted learning [.]” See my full review here.

31. Natalie Lim, Elegy for Opportunity: The
full-length debut by Vancouver poet Natalie Lim, winner of the 2018 CBC Poetry
Prize and Room magazine’s 2020 Emerging Writer Award, and author of the
chapbook arrhythmia (Rahila’s Ghost Press, 2022), is Elegy for
Opportunity (Hamilton ON: Buckrider Books/Wolsak and Wynn, 2025). I’m
curious about the way Lim approaches narrative and her first-person lyric:
offering the suggestion of something relatively straightforward, but curving a
bit. “I’ve only written love poems for months so it feels like I’ve written no
poems / at all.” she offers, to open the prose poem “Love Poems Don’t Win
Contests,” that begins the collection. “Instead of writing, I’m sitting on a
park bench in early spring, the air so heavy with pollen and promise that it’s
hard to breathe. I make eye contact with a dachshund wearing a coat and yet all
I do is complain.” There’s something intriguing and almost wry about the way
Lim acknowledges the economy of poem composition, including attempting contests,
writing her failure as an accomplishment (or the other way around, perhaps). “I
am scared of killing everything I touch,” she writes, to open “On Biology,”
“this includes people, which is new, / and plants, which is not. / did you know
we lose vertebrae / as we age? we’re born with thirty-three and die / with
twenty-four, usually, the lower ones fusing together / by the time we call
ourselves grown.” Lim’s poems are immediate, and the collection provides a
myriad of lyric shapes and purposes as Lim feels out possibility, the way one
could argue a debut full-length collection should be, seeking out what options
the lyric form might allow. She works poems big and small, expansive and
uniquely condensed. There’s a meandering element I quite like, a fresh
counterpoint to far too many poems that one can see the ending from the
beginning. Lim’s poems are thoughtful, unafraid of exploring within a
particular moment, or making sharp turns; they move as needed with a quiet
confidence. I’m quite taken with her short poem “Winter in Ottawa,” a poem she
is possibly unaware holds a title similar to one of John Newlove’s final
pieces. See my full review here.

32. Jumoke Verissimo, Circumtrauma: Poems: From
award-winning Toronto-based Nigerian poet, novelist,
children’s writer and critic Jumoke Verissimo, following the poetry titles I
Am Memory (Lagos, Nigeria: DADA Books, 2008) and The Birth of Illusion
(Nigeria: FULLPOINT, 2015), as well as the novel A Small Silence (London
UK: Cassava Republic, 2019), comes her first full-length Canadian title, Circumtrauma:
Poems (Toronto ON: Coach House Books, 2025), a book-length poem that
captures and articulates the details and ripples of the Nigeria-Biafra War
(1967-1970). Histories such as these have rippling effects throughout a
population across years, and history forgotten, after all, dooms to repeat. As
Verissimo writes as part of her preface to the collection: “I began researching
the Nigeria-Biafra War (also known as the Nigerian Civil War) because I wanted
answers on why the conflict has stayed on the bodies of even the unborn. How
does one capture the unacknowledged edged pain that resonates across
generations and may even inform the lens from which social relations are
formed?” There are structural echoes of Verissimo’s accumulated lyric
articulating witness comparable to Kingston, Ontario-based poet and critic
Otoniya J. Okot Bitek’s full-length debut 100 Days (Edmonton AB:
University of Alberta Press, 2016), a collection of one hundred poems through
one hundred days of the 1994 Rwanda Genocide, or even, to a lesser degree, the
full-length poetry collection articulations of history and the ripples of
trauma through working archival materials of further recent titles such as
Montreal poet, editor and translator Darby Minott Bradford’s full-length debut,
Dream of No One but Myself (Kingston ON: Brick Books, 2021) [see my
review of such here] or Vancouver poet and editor Andrea Actis’ full-length
poetry debut, Grey All Over (Brick Books, 2021) [see my review of such
here]. Through Verissimo, her lyrics hold together
precisely because of the way she pulls them apart, focusing on individual
moments, elements and parts of speech, collecting together to form a far wider
and complex tapestry. The length and breadth are entirely held though such deep
attention and precision. “a rickety train pulled up / heads disappeared,” she
writes, early on in the collection, “our brothers left home / for a godforsaken
place / our brothers returned / with a gunshot in the head [.]” There’s a
lot to admire about literary work that attempts to deliberately uncover and
examine such brutal history, especially for those stories buried, overlooked or
simply forgotten (I was first made aware of Ottawa’s “Mad Bomber of Parliament”
in 1966, for example, thanks to a poem by Judith Fitzgerald, from her 1977
Coach House Press poetry title lacerating heartwood). The stories might
fade, but the body remembers, even across generations. Facts and stories
matter, and to lose the stories of such brutality is to render an entirely
different violence. “we were all brothers / massacred / albeit on a very small scale,” Verissimo writes,
as part of “10111110-b,” “we are all
memory’s children / superior in our pain [.]” Circumtrauma swirls a
lyric notation of accumulated moments, offering archival moments across and
through a devastation that continues, rippling across generations. Or, as she
writes early on in the collection: “our body is a people: before and after [.]” See my full review here.

33. Paul Vermeersch, NMLCT: Poems: The latest
from Toronto poet and editor Paul Vermeersch, following his Shared Universe:
New and Selected Poems 1995-2020 (Toronto ON: ECW Press, 2020) [see my
review of such here], is NMLCT: Poems (ECW Press, 2025), a collection
very much constructed as a book-length project. I’m always intrigued to see the
first collection by any poet, following the publication of a selected; to look
at a new work composed after having examined, and self-examined, even if rather
broad in scope, the length and breadth of a career in poetry. “Words say there
is another place.” the poem “ESCAPE FROM MCHNCT” begins. “But who will make it
there?” Vermeersch’s eighth full length poetry collection (if one counts the
selected, which seems only fair), it is interesting in how his work has evolved
from articulating echoes of nostalgic looks at once-imagined futures from the
mid-twentieth century into this assemblage of four-lined stanza blocks,
themselves accumulating into a narrative structure of speculative fiction,
setting a conflict between animal and machine. “Submerged in celestial shadow,”
the poem “THE SECOND MOON BEHIND THE FIRST MOON” writes, “saturated and
rattling with frags / of cyborg nightmares, the collective unconscious of
articifial life, none / of this will be remembered. But it can be recovered.”
Throughout the collection, Vermeersch builds his bricks of lyric narrative in
lengthy and even gymnastic lines, more oriented in propulsive, almost staccato,
sound than in his prior work. He builds his bricks, four lines per, whether
through sequences of four poems, one to a page, including the opener, “On
Monstrosity,” and to close, “Deep Water / Amnesia,” with the bulk of the
collection, not to mention a further interruption or two, made up of
self-contained poems, each of which, themselves, as quartets of these
poem-blocks. His structures are rhythmic, even propulsive, offering line breaks
when needed to maintain that particular four-line shape. And through this
assemblage of stanza-bricks emerges a book-length narrative umbrella composed
to examine the tensions in that imagined future, between the binaries of
machine (“MCHNCT”) and animal (“NMLCT”) (humans are most likely on either side
of that particular binary, I suppose, depending). “Here you are.” the poem
“WELCOME TO MCHNCT” writes. Composed as a response to recent more overt
cultural shifts across technology (and vice versa, of course), including
elements of artificial intelligence programs that continue to propagate,
seemingly against our will, this collection furthers a growing (and intriguing)
thread of speculative fiction across Canadian poetry, one that also includes
Toronto poet and filmmaker Lindsay B-e’s full-length poetry debut, The
Cyborg Anthology: Poems (Kingston ON: Brick Books, 2020), an anthology
shaped around speculative fiction, exploring ideas of consciousness, being,
artificial intelligence and technology, and Ottawa-based poet Mahaila Smith’s
own full-length debut, Seed Beetle: poems (Hamilton ON: Stelliform
Press, 2025). Much as with Smith’s work specifically, Vermeersch’s poems
provide a landscape of speculative conflict as warning for the present, of
where this all might be heading, akin to James Cameron’s original 1984 film, The
Terminator. See my full review here.

34. Gillian Sze, An Orange, A Syllable: Having been
startled by how quietly good I thought her prior title, quiet
night think: poems & essays (Toronto ON: ECW Press, 2022), I was
intrigued to see Montreal poet Gillian Sze’s latest, the poetry collection An
Orange, A Syllable (ECW Press, 2025). As quiet night think: poems &
essays was a blend of meditative, first person lyric prose and poems around
the swirls and reconsiderations of self, culture and being that accompanied her
new motherhood, this latest shifts those leanings back into the shape and
approach of the poem a bit further down Sze’s narrative/parenting line. This is
very much a sequel to that prior collection, offering further insights into
culture, language, self and possibility through the ongoing lens of motherhood,
partnership and domestic patter. An Orange, A
Syllable is built as an accumulation of lyric prose blocks, seventy-six in
sequence. Occasionally there might be a symbol set atop one of these blocks, as
to suggest a new line of thinking, a new sequence or cluster, five in total
across the collection. Throughout, Sze writes of love, of language and the new
ways she’s learned to approach and encounter, both within and beyond a domestic
space that almost sounds set within the Covid-19 era: “What is out there? I
think I have forgotten. My world thicks down / to the sweetness in each fold of
laundry. The growing tower of cotton, / tidy and eversteady. For a while, I can
stop thinking and let the hands / spread across the sleeves, the hems, the
stitches. The hands know where / smoothness is right, know where to put the
parts and when the folds / are finished.” Again, as a furthering of her prior
collection, Sze writes of engaging language, her own background and self in new
ways, engaging with the immediacy, and the layers one gains through attempting
to communicate such to one’s children (with familiar echoes, certainly, of my
own accumulation, through the book of smaller, of prose poems through
and amid a similar period of domestic, parenting small children). To attempt to
speak on any of this requires one’s own understanding, after all. This is a
sharp and meaningful collection, and reason, once more, to go through that
prior collection as well. See my full review here.

35. Melanie Dennis Unrau, Goose: From
Winnipeg poet, editor and scholar Melanie Dennis Unrau comes the debut
full-length poetry title, Goose (Picton ON: Assembly Press, 2025), a
book-length visual poem project of simultaneous excavation and erasure that
emerges from the work of “Canadian Development of Mines expert and Word War I
veteran” Sidney Clarke Ells (1878-1971), the self-declared “father of the tar
sands,” specifically his 1938 collection of poems, short stories and essays, Northland
Trails (1938). Through an expansive visual sequence, Unrau works her
project as one of critical response, working to engage with and, specifically,
against the original intent of Ell’s language back into itself, and the
implications of what those original intents have wrought. The book is set with
an afterword by the author, and an opening “FOREWORD” by McMurray Métis, that
opens: “There is a long history in Canada and indeed across the world of
European ‘explorers’ appropriating the knowledge, skills, and labour of Indigenous
peoples for their personal and collective gain, only to tur around and declare
the territories of Indigenous peoples ‘terra nullius,’ and their cultures and
ways of live inferior and unworthy of respect. This dialectic of
appropriation-negation is familiar to Indigenous people across the globe. And
so it is with Fort McMurray, its oil sands, and their ‘father,’ Sidley Ells.
Through research, community and public awareness, and the construction of our
cultural centre, McMurray Métis hope to correct these self-serving and
distorted narratives, and assert our historic and continued presence, way of
life, and self-determination. Let this foreword be one small step in that
direction.” Visually expansive, with a delightful use of image and space, Unrau
moves through the language, sketches and, seemingly, the typeface, of Ells’
1938 collection to unravel an acknowledgment of the Indigenous peoples within
that space, and the environment and landscape of those pilfered, poisoned
lands, showcasing the illusion of self that Ells presumed upon that landscape,
flipping a script of belonging that was never his to take. “Inspired by books
like Jordan Abel’s The Place of Scraps, M. NourbeSe Phillip’s Zong!,
Syd Zolf’s Janey’s Arcadia, Shane Rhodes’s Dead White Men, and
Lesley Battler’s Endangers Hydrocarbons,” Unrau writes, as part of the
book’s “AFTERWORD,” “I started to make visual poetry out of found text and
images from Northland Trails. After some experimentation, I developed a
method of building poems and critical arguments about Northland Trails by
tracing words and illustrations from its pages.” See my full review here.
36. Steffi Tad-y, Notes from the Ward: The second
full-length collection by Manila, Phillipines-born Vancouver-based poet Steffi
Tad-y, following From the Shoreline (Guelph ON: Gordon Hill Press, 2022)
is Notes from the Ward (Gordon Hill Press, 2025), a book composed, the
back cover offers, as a “collection of poetry exploring bipolar disorder and
psychotic break through lived experience and a poet’s eye.” Through sharp,
first-person lyrics, Tad-y offers a variation on the declarative point-form,
providing a precision across difficult subject matter, writing phrases that
accumulate across her lyric stretches. The foundation of Tad-y’s lyric clarity
holds each line in place, even through descriptions of untethering; a lyric one
might hold on to, for dear life. In the poem “Mangroves,” as she writes: “Back
in the truck with Dad & Uncle. I tell them how the trees are / skin &
sanctuary to the coast, protection against the onslaught / of storms. // My
father places his hand on the headrest of my uncle in the / driver seat and
says, Families can be mangroves too.” What holds the collection together as a
coherent unit are the dozen numbered title poems throughout, gathering her
thoughts in a space that blends both attempting to heal and the challenges of
existing in such a physical and mental space. As “Notes from the Ward #3,” a
poem subtitled “After Ocean Vuong’s ‘Reasons for Staying’,” begins:
“Think of the next thirty years, mother asked. // The magnolia tree at Oben
Street still a pleasant memory. // Of the book, black with deep blue letters,
music despite my lack / of understanding.” Tad-y offers lyric declarations
underneath titles set as umbrellas, suggesting and directing and hinting at the
context of lines that blend direct with the indirect; her poems provide a tone
of attempting clarity through these poems, these ward-notes, seeking both as
documentary and process. While working through Tad-y’s poems, I’m reminded how,
in his novel Why Must a Black Writer Write About Sex? (translated by
David Homel; Toronto ON: Coach House Press, 1994), Dany Laferrière wrote that
he composed his first novel—referencing his debut, How to Make Love to a
Negro (Without Getting Tired) (translated by David Homel; Coach House
Press, 1987)—“to save his life.” See my full review here.

37. Isabella Wang, November, November: In the
“Afterword” to her second full-length collection, November, November
(Gibsons BC: Nightwood Editions, 2025), a follow-up to Pebble Swing
(Nightwood Editions, 2021), Vancouver poet Isabella Wang writes of her ongoing
engagement with the work of the late Salt Spring Island poet Phyllis Webb
(1927-2021). The poems that make up Wang’s November,
November are composed with such deep and delicate precision; as a calendar
of meditative space around grief, homage, illness and recovery. “parts of this
body are negative / parts of this body are diffusely positive,” she writes, as
part of the poem “THE BODY IS” in the third section of the book, “this body is
whole / this body goes by one given name / except the parts of it removed [.]”
Structured in five sections—“CONSTELLATIONS: NOVEMBER 2020,” “PASSAGE 2:
NOVEMBER 2021,” “PASSAGE 3: DECEMBER 2021,” “PASSAGE 4: NOVEMBER 2022” and
“PASSAGE 5: NOVEMBER 2024”—the third and fifth of which are composed of
shorter, self-contained pieces, there is something really compelling in the way
Wang offers this collection as a deep engagement with Webb and her work through
a particular period, through Webb’s death and Wang’s cancer diagnosis,
treatment and recovery. Wang’s poems allow for influence and engagement with
Webb’s work without overtaking Wang’s own lyric, offering a foundation for
possibility across a delicate, open-hearted and deeply mature lyric. Webb’s
work might have been the engine, but Wang is clearly at the wheel. Wang has become
quite adept at pulling at the small moment, allowing the line to extend across
a great distance, offering her own take on the long poem through sequences,
sections, clusters of poems and, eventually, this book-length, meditative
suite, all of which is wrapped around attention, and a deeply-attuned ear. See my full review here.

38. Guy Birchard, Most By Books: I was recently intrigued
to catch a copy of Victoria, British Columbia poet Guy Birchard’s Most By
Books (Victoria BC/Parry Sound ON: Symple Persone Press, 2023), a chapbook
designed and produced by poet Jack Davis “in a private edition of forty
copies.” I was fortunate enough to discover Birchard’s work through a title
produced by Beth Follett, Only Seemly (St. John’s NL: Pedlar Press,
2018), a title I picked up a small number of extra copies of when the press
folded, the book is just that good. I give them away, here and there, to those
that I think should be reading it, as well as to counter the fact that there is
something about Birchard’s approach to almost going out of his way to sit just
under the radar, releasing new work with small or even smaller, ephemeral
presses. The title of Birchard’s latest collection, Most By Books, is
excised from a longer quote, set on the title page to include the full—“They do
MOST BY BOOKS who could do much without them.”—lifted from the prose work Christian
Morals (1716) by the English writer Sir Thomas Browne (1605-1682), a
posthumously-published work originally composed as advice for his eldest
children. Through nearly forty pages of lyric heft, Birchard reshapes Browne’s
advice, leading by example through a selection of poems rife with reading.
“From my fingers,” begins the poem “Mustapha Reached His Koran Back,” “off the
shelf from which I had casually picked / up The Book in barely enough time to
open it, Mustapha, with / dignified tutting, his father projecting approval,
retrieved the / Koran from my hands, from before my eyes.” These are poems
built from books, from not only reading but years of intense, dedicated and
ongoing study; the kind of attentions that lesser poets proclaim loudly across
author biographies, entirely the opposite of what Birchard writes for his:
“Scholar of nothing. No degrees. No prizes. Neither profession, trade nor
career. A lay poet. Anglo-Canadian.” There is such an interesting way that
Birchard uses writing, uses what we might think of as poems, as a way of
thinking through writing and big ideas. “Augustine, rhetorician / that
millennium and a half ago,” opens the piece “Homage to Sarah Ruden for Her Confessions,”
“yet crazy as Beckett or Roberto Benigni / by virtue of the sedulousness and
circularity // of his case, for want of confidence enough to match her /
predecessors, drives our current lady translator to her cups.” This is
Birchard, the well-read thinking reader, the intellectual crafting poems out of
reading notes, allowing the lyric to explore and examine. He writes of St.
Augustine and The Troubadour Club in West Hollywood, Jack Kerouac and Saint
Pancras, moving across incredible distances through a short cluster of lines,
stepping one foot ahead of another, keeping such detailed notes as he journeys.
His poems blend study with journey, a wandering through language that explores
alternate corners and catalogues of language. Dedicated to the late writer and
critic Stan Dragland (1942-2022), Birchard’s bricolage, his own ‘journeying
through bookland,’ one might say, is certainly comparable to Dragland’s work,
but holds a different tenor, whether to Dragland’s work or the work of that
other poet of bricolage (as Dragland wrote), Perth, Ontario poet Phil Hall.
“Exiting the cinder block shower next morning,” writes the poem “Butterflies
& Turtle,” “not a / soul around, sunlit, stepping into his gotch, his
shoulders / and damp, bare back were suddenly a drift of Painted Ladies /
alighting. // Guy fetches the camera a look of small-c concern.” There’s a
density to Birchard’s lines that hold a different kind of weight, perhaps, well
beyond the myriad of alternate reference, offering not just connecting reading
and ideas from across an alternate spectrum, but, veering occasionally into Old
English, one that holds a depth of language, and language meaning. See my full review here.

39. MA│DE, ZZOO: In case you weren’t
aware, collaborative duo MA│DE, “established 2018,” as the biography in their
full-length poetry debut, ZZOO (Windsor ON: Palimpsest Press, 2025)
reads, “is a collaborative writing entity, a unity of two voices fused into a
single, poetic third. It is the name given to the joint authorship of Mark
Laliberte and Jade Wallace – artists whose active solo practices, while
differing radically, serve to complement one another.” The publication of ZZOO,
which appears through Jim Johnstone’s Anstruther Books imprint, follows a
quartet of chapbooks, the work from some of which falls into this new
collection: Test Centre (ZED Press, 2019), A Trip to the ZZOO
(Collusion Books, 2020), A Barely Concealed Design (Puddles of Sky
Press, 2020) and Expression Follows Grim Harmony (JackPine Press, 2023).
The poems and illustrations that make up ZZOO actively play with and
between the binary, composed as a blended work of smart and engaged language
bounce and clatter and precision, resonating with sound and lyric play across
the human-animal divide. There is a bounce and clatter, but one of a density of
lyric, one that works to interrogate relations and interrelations, offering a
collaborative language between and across language, sparking a binary through a
binary, and where they might possibly connect. The poems are layered, and
sharp, writing in the midst of, or even between, or beyond, the work of these
two, such as the single sentence of the poem “PITCHDOWN BAY,” that reads: “The
small sound of a falling snowflake, / slow it down, low frequency rumble / of a
whale, both melting into the ocean / in time, the water glowing as bright / as
lanterns, and sailors drowning as if / they’d seen lighthouses, more lost men /
entering from the shore’s mouth, that / emptiness between the stars, pupils /
compensating for this hard blanket of / deadlight night, still surrounded by /
silnt shorebirds, nested, watching, / stringing the surface of the water / like
quickening nix when they alight.” See my full review here.

40. Qurat Dar, Non-Prophet: I’m impressed by the
meditative and exploratory “serious play” (what bpNichol termed it) of the
full-length poetry debut by the former Mississauga Youth Poet Laureate Qurat
Dar, her Non-Prophet (Fredericton NB: Goose Lane Editions, 2025), winner
of the inaugural Claire Harris Poetry Prize. “The sunlit dargah knows / no
prayer but that of survival.” Dar writes, as part of the poem “Snail Responds
to the Ring of Crushed Eggshells / I Put Around the Lettuce,” “A porcelain cage
that / could spear you in its shattering. Ask yourself: / do the dervishes spin
or spiral?” As judge Kazim Ali wrote to blurb the collection: “I loved Non-Prophet
for so many reasons: this book speaks to my own experience and history, it
addresses questions of spiritual and daily live (and for many of us, those two
are inseparable), but perhaps most importantly, these are exciting and
immediate poems that continue the great legacy of Claire Harris. As Harris did
in her poems, Qurat Dar bravely confronts a cultural imperative to silence or
acquiescence with refusal; more than refusal, but response.” Claire Harris
(1937-2018), for those unaware, was an award-winning Canadian poet based in
Calgary, born in Trinidad, and who emigrated to Canada in 1966. As her online
entry at The Canadian Encyclopedia offers: “Using such verse techniques
as contrasting prose and poetry on the page, or alternating journalistic prose
with the voice of prophecy, Harris dramatizes and makes public the
psychological struggles experienced by racialized women who face oppression.” Through
Dar’s Non-Prophet, she articulates her own seriousness beneath such
performative gestures, and a sense of spiritual through the everyday, as
Manahil Bandukwala offers as part of her own blurb for the collection: “As we
hurtle towards annihilation, Dar combines rich Islamic and Sufi mythology with
deepfakes and Teams lights. The poems loop and circle through destruction and
renewal, diaspora and home, worshipper and worshipped.” “I / see a thousand
patient / fingers where others / see God.” Dar writes, as part of “Waiting for
the Moon to Howl Back.” Or “The opposite of eulogy is a prophecy,” a poem (with
such a striking title) that reads with such being and purpose, and a repeated
declaration of presence that the narrator appears to be directing, first and
foremost, to herself. See my full review here.

41. Anna Swanson, The Garbage Poems: St.
John’s, Newfoundland poet Anna Swanson’s second full-length poetry title is The
Garbage Poems (Kingston ON: Brick Books, 2025), a book that follows her
full-length debut, The Nights Also (Toronto ON: Tightrope Books, 2020),
which itself won both the Gerald Lampert Memorial Award and a Lambda Literary
Award. The poems that make up The Garbage Poems are composed, as the
whole collection is framed, via prompt, utilizing the accident of finding
abandoned refuse (and language) at various locations to prompt and propel her
poems, with the resulting short narrative lyrics set into sections based upon
where such materials were gathered. “All words (except titles) from garbage
collected at a swimming home in Flatrock, NL.” offers the subtitle of the first
section, “Flatrock,” or the section “Big Punch Bowl,” that adds that “All words
(except titles) from garbage collected at Big Punch Bowl Pond near St. John’s,
NL.” The use of such a particular prompt is reminiscent of Carin Makuz’s The
Litter I See project, which began a decade ago by asking Canadian writers
to compose prose or poetry using the prompt of a photograph of trash, wherever
it might have been found or abandoned. Swanson’s poems articulate such lovely
bricolage, stitching narratives as a collage of subject, accumulation and
language, stitching narratives from found materials into reason, logic, story.
“We are not sorry. We are / the ice that will not melt,” writes the ending of
the poem “For the Boys Cliff-Jumping / by the Memorial Stone,” “the special
extract in the root beer of not aging, / the sparkling under-king, the
carbonated wet dream, // the premium formula good stuff. We are, / at a price
you do not know, // at any price, / this.” Swanson crafts her articulations
with the building blocks what is lost, set aside, discarded, writing youthful
hijinks and Queer desire, flailing about and feeling invisible, set aside or
silenced; writing what is seen but not noticed, what is noticed but not fully
understood, and how each object, each story, is changed through the process of
looking. As the poem “For the Two Girls in the / Lower Pool, Kissing” offers:
“You know the cost of caution / is always more.” She writes her narratives as a
sequence of coming-of-age, of coming out, of attempting to find and be found
instead of feeling, being, lost. “Call it form,” she writes, “sure, these
limits, // this room of too few words whose walls / I hit first, before my own
faltering.”
See my full review here.
42. Jane Shi, echolalia echolalia: I’m
intrigued by the long sentence, sentences, that stitch together to form
Vancouver poet Jane Shi’s full-length debut, echolalia echolalia
(Kingston ON: Brick Books, 2024), a collection that follows her debut chapbook Leaving
Chang’e on Read (Vancouver BC: Rahila’s Ghost Press, 2022). Stretching
across the length and breadth of the one hundred and twenty compact pages of
her debut collection, hers is a remarkable extended thought across lyric
meditation and formal invention writing the body, loss, nostalgia and layers
not simply reconsidered, but recycled, repurposed. “a tide-pool winter a hiss /
of hot violets little fibres / along my bedspread brush of threaded grass / in
the grubby broken cinema of memory scrub / my back filthily in the thick
sublunary lust / starts would make canyons o me the vast valleys / airless
marshes where travellers stumbled,” she writes, to open the poem “worship the
exit light,” a poem subtitled “A found poem created / from my
wordpress poetry journal / of my late teens (2008-2016) [.]” These
are such lovely visual and gestural sweeps, such as the poem “I want to face
consequences,” which begins with and leads into such an expansive swirl across
the page, one of a number of such she composes throughout: “17 / years / old,
and / still throwing / tantrums, the suburban / problem so specifically /
misdiagnosed / as the problem / of picky eating, on a sunday 10 / years later
she’ll check / into a resignation hostel, become / an audible ghost, beckon a
make-believe / social worker to arrive at her pillowside like a tooth / fairy.”
There’s a coming-of-age or coming-into-being element to these poems, but one
far more self-aware and wry, more playful, than most examples I’m aware of,
providing a sense of exploration and wonder, collaging observation with
cultural and pop culture references, and what one carries no matter where one
lands. See my full review here.
43. Manahil Bandukwala, Heliotropia: The
second full-length poetry title by Manahil Bandukwala, a writer and visual
artist who currently divides her time between Ottawa and Mississauga, Ontario,
is Heliotropia (Kingston ON: Brick Books, 2024), a collection
shortlisted both for the City of Ottawa Book Awards and the Archibald Lampman
Award. Heliotropia follows on the heels of a handful of chapbooks, both
solo and collaborative, as well as her full-length debut, MONUMENT
(Brick Books, 2022), which was itself shortlisted for the 2023 Gerald Lampert
Award, the same year she was selected as a Writer’s Trust of Canada Rising
Star. “I dig out a hole and find things I once held / so tight,” she writes, to
open the poem “August,” part of the poem-sequence “Seventeen Months of
Distance,” “though nothing stopped their time to leave. / Fur shed when they
moved // into bigger and better lives. We are never ready / to absorb the
emptiness of loss, but must // pause to howl at the chameleon of being.” Set as
a suite of stand-alone poems amid poem-clusters, Heliotropia is a
collection of first-person narrative lyric heart. As her first full-length
collection, MONUMENT, as she offers as part of an interview last
fall, began as “a single poem that sought to highlight obscured Mughal women in
history,” a poem that evolved into a manuscript, having outgrown those initial
boundaries, this new collection writes (as the cover copy provides) “a
meditation on love during times of social and political upheaval. As a
sunflower’s growth reaches toward the sun, so, she suggests, is a lover’s
growth compelled by the gravitational pull and soul-light of their beloved.” Heliotropia
is a collection composed, purposely and unapologetically, of first-person
love poems, something the “serious writer” has long been told to steer of,
whether through creative writing classes or elsewhere (and for good reason, as
most contemporary love poems hold a combination of hollow, cringe and smarm;
the usual accomplished approach is from the side, not head-on), often set
aside, as well, for the sake of the more ironic and postmodern distance. And
yet, this impulse is where many writers begin, often in youth, falling into
attempts at writing that can’t progress thought beyond that initial feeling,
unable to find or reveal the poem, and the language, beneath what the heart
only knows. Through Heliotropia, Bandukwala approaches her subject, and
her lyric, with an eye on study, working her way through the collection with a
balance of exploratory distance and pure feeling, held together through the
bonds of craft. “The illiterate man feels / in the dark for words / he did not write. //
Outside his house,” Bandukwala writes, as part of “The Splitting,” “some men
say / he is a madman, others say he is / a poet // who believes enough words
will build a bridge to a life after now / where only beings lighter than air
float. // But the illiterate man is neither.” See my full review here.
44. Emily Austin, Gay Girl Prayers: As
part of the recent shortlist reading for this year’s Archibald Lampman Award,
Ottawa writer Emily Austin spoke of composing the poems that became her
full-length poetry debut, Gay Girl Prayers (Kingston ON: Brick Books,
2024), while simultaneously working on what would become the first novel, Everyone
in This Room Will Someday Be Dead (2021). These were poems, she said, but
she didn’t necessarily presume anyone would be interested in reading them. The
poems of Gay Girl Prayers, each of which are titled after each specific
chapter and verse source, exist as a reclamation, set as responses through her
own Biblical studies and Catholic upbringing. “Take the stones you plan to
throw at her / for not screaming,” she writes, to rework “Deuteronomy
12:23-27,” “or not screaming loudly enough / while she was raped / put them
inside of your pockets / and walk on water [.]” As she said at the event, she
didn’t think of these as poems per se, or herself as a poet, and instead focused
on two further novels (with another forthcoming), all of which appear with
Atria Books and Simon & Schuster Canada: Interesting Facts About Space
(2023), We Could Be Rats (2025) and Is This a Cry for Help? (due
to appear in January 2026). What she composed as her own playful sketch-notes
responding to some of the Bible’s darker elements, then, were temporarily set
aside. “Your mother came named from her mother’s womb / and retured there
gutted,” the poem “Job 1:21” writes, “Cover yourself in a golden chamois /
return to the forest adorned [.]” Gay Girl Prayers, as the copy for the
collection informs, is a “collection of poetry reclaiming Catholic prayers and
biblical passages to empower girls, women, and members of the LGBTQIA+
community,” a curious blend prompted by, among other factors, the fact that her
author biography provides that she “studied English literature, religious
studies, and library science at King’s University College and Western
University.” The poems of Gay Girl Prayers, quite literally, work to
reclaim agency against certain Biblical language, especially those elements too
often cherry-picked and weaponized. “Heaven is ten girls / who take their lamps
/ to one another’s bed chambers / to light their rooms /until they sleep.”
writes a short poem near the beginning, the title set at the end as a footnote,
rewriting “Matthew 23:1.” These are poems translated away from weaponization or
shame, away from the suggestion that any of God’s creatures, so to speak, as
they truly are, has any less value than any other. These are poems of
reclamation and biting humour, attempting a kind of play through translation,
comparable in form to other book-length poetry-projects such as bpNichol’s Translating
Translating Apollinaire: A Preliminary Report (1969) or Derek Beaulieu’s THE
NEWSPAPER (2013), but with a far different and more specific intent,
approaching the source material as something that requires adaptation beyond
simple translation, however the approach. Far too often, Biblical text is
approached as unironic, pure fact instead of as a living, breathing text; a
series of book-length metaphor texts, lessons that should be held as guidelines
for approaching thought, instead of a bludgeon with which to weaponize. Through
Gay Girl Poems, scripture offers a new way of approaching text, some of
which sit as koans, one to a page. In Gay Girl Poems, Austin has allowed
her own responses, turns, and twists to open up new possibilities through
antiquated language, and antiquated thinking. See my full review here.
45. Sabyasachi (Sachi) Nag, The Alphabet of Aliens: prose poems: The
fourth full-length poetry collection, and fifth title overall, by Calcutta-born
Mississauga, Ontario-based Sabyasachi (Sachi) Nag, is The Alphabet of
Aliens: prose poems (Mawenzi House, 2025). Following Bloodlines
(2006), Could You Please, Please Stop Singing? (Mosaic Press, 2016) and Uncharted
(Toronto ON: Mansfield Press, 2021), the poems across The Alphabet of Aliens
blur the boundaries between short prose and lyric, subtitled “prose poems,” but
landing, more often than not, in the imperfect designation of flash fiction or
postcard stories. “At the corner of South Linn and Washington is a
consolation,” opens the piece “The Curry Shop,” “but mostly empty. I entered
once but didn’t eat, instead, suffering an immediate deflation upon touching
the menu, traded stories, conflating places and times.” I’ve noted previously
how the self-declared prose poems of the late Connecticut poet Russell Edson
(1935-2014), said to be the
father of the American prose poem, felt more akin to flash fiction than even
the short fictions of writers such as Lydia Davis and Kathy Fish, so the declared
boundaries surrounding prose poems have been blurred for some time. Across
seventy-nine individual pieces, each ranging from one to three pages in length,
Nag composes a series of first-person narratives, of first-person reports,
offering sketch-notes on activity and an interiority, monologues blending
observation, commentary and documentary. As the first of the three-sectioned
“Place is a Sentence” begins: “To prove you are capable of belonging you had to
reveal your place. Since they were busy touching different parts of your tongue
you could say nothing else. What is place anyway? The scent of your tilled
back garden, someone said, opened a window. And in the strong headwind when
you floated up like a shadow of three pasts, they freaked out.” See my full review here.

46. Stephanie Bolster, Long Exposure: The
long-awaited fifth full-length poetry title from Montreal poet Stephanie
Bolster is Long Exposure (Windsor ON: Palimpsest Press, 2025), a title
I’ve known of as in-the-works for some time, given an excerpt of the
work-in-progress appeared as the chapbook GHOSTS (above/ground press,
2017). As well, her title that takes on a slightly different sheen, given that
fourteen years have passed since her prior full-length title. Long exposure,
indeed. Bolster is, as you might already know, the award-winning author of White
Stone: The Alice Poems (Montreal QC: Signal Editions/Vehicule Press, 1998),
which won the Governor General’s Award for Poetry and the Gerald Lampert Award,
Two Bowls of Milk (Toronto ON: McClelland and Stewart, 1999), Pavilion
(Toronto ON: McClelland and Stewart, 2002) and A Page from the Wonders of
Life on Earth (London ON: Brick Books, 2011), as well as a small handful of
chapbooks (including four from above/ground press). Across her published work
to-date, Bolster continues to focus on the book-length project, but through a
poetic that began with an attention to finely-honed and self-contained,
densely-sharp lyrics, gradually evolving into this new flavour of book-length
suite: a stretched-out sense of the fragment, which accumulate across the
sentence and staggered narrative into the form of the long poem. As she writes,
mid-way through Long Exposure: “Rail cars full of oil slid faster down /
the slope until at the curve where the town / was a birthday party exploded and
a woman / with cancer who’d chosen not to mark / this year still lives because
she didn’t / go. All that long-dead / plankton lit the sky.” As the back cover
of Long Exposure provides: “After Hurricane Katrina, the photographer
Robert Polidori flew to New Orleans to document the devastation. In the
wreckage he witnessed, and in her questions about what she saw in what he saw,
Stephanie Bolster found the beginnings of a long poem. These questions led to
unexpected places; meanwhile, life kept pouring in.” In her own acknowledgments
at the end of collection, Bolster offers: “What began in 2009 as an
interrogation of my unsettling fascination with Robert Polidori’s photographs
of post-Katrina New Orleans became an education that has lasted for 16 years
and does not end here. I am grateful to those who have supported this project,
reading drafts, asking questions, and posing challenges.” See my full review here.

47. Christina Shah, if: prey, then: huntress: I’m intrigued
by this full-length debut by Vancouver poet Christina Shah, if: prey, then:
huntress (Gibsons BC: Nightwood Editions, 2025), a poetry collection that
“invites the reader to take a freight elevator ride into the guts of heavy
industry,” and featuring back cover blurbs by Canadian poets Tom Wayman and
Kate Braid, two of the originators of the 1970s Canadian “work poetry” ethos
(amid those Kootenay School of Poetry origins) that also included early work by
poets Phil Hall and ErÃn Moure [see my longer note on some threads on “work
poetry” as part of my recent review of Philadelphia poet Gina Myers’ Works
& Days]. Shah’s lyrics provide a fascinating patter, one that utilizes
the subject matter of labour across scenes of industrial sites and restaurant
workers, composing what appear at first glance as first-person descriptive
narratives, but one capable of nuanced twists and turns of sound and meaning.
“dendrobranchiata,” begins the poem “prawn,” “you throw your roe out / like you
remove a cava cage / spill the wine, let life flow / into its briny flute [.]”
There’s almost a way her lyric is closer to the language model of poets such as
ryan fitzpatrick or Peter Culley than Wayman or Braid, existing somewhere
between those two points, offering labour as her building blocks but language
as her poem’s propulsion. “here,” begins her poem “fear and probability,” “a
woman’s soft body / is found only / in cubicle fabric nests // but I am a
huntress / sparkles under steel toes / shuffling between petrochemical rainbows
/ into open bays / under heavy-lift ulnae / along the riverfront [.]” She
offers her perspectives through and around labour, and around gender, a
conversation less prevalent than it should be, even despite the high
percentages of women working across various industries for decades. The
language flourishes, provides flourish. While labour exists as her surrounding
subject, much as Gina Myers, Shah sets her poems at the moment of actual,
concrete and physical work, writing, as the short poem “ulnaris/radialis”
begins: “egret, backhoe— / hand origami’s / carpal puppetry / prepares her for
/ the work of days / of women; [.]” See my full review here.

48. Natalie Rice, Nightjar: The second full-length
poetry title by Natalie Rice, a poet recently relocated to Nova Scotia from
Kelowna, British Columbia, is Nightjar (Kentville NS: Gaspereau Press,
2025), following her full-length debut, Scorch (Gaspereau Press, 2023)
[see my review of such here], a collection I described at the time as having
been composed through “a carved hush.” “How to stay with / what was hidden—,”
offers Nightjar’s opening five-page poem “The Sea Rose,” “to
clutch / hip to hip // with a hole to the heart / until the pitted cliffs /
revealed themselves.” There is such a delicate precision to her lyrics,
unselfconscious and thoughtfully, carefully set. Rice composes her poems as
field notes, as sketches, offering carved lines on movement and landscapes,
emerging through trees and farm spaces, turning her lyrics carefully between
nimble fingers. As the opening poem continues: “Maybe there’s an ocean / behind
the fog, I said / long before // we made new / weather and other forms / of breaking.”
I appreciate the way her lyric speaks from the edge of human occupation, of
language, peering deep into the trees and the barrens. “To turn the mountain
inside // out and wear it / against the skin. This is now // a love poem,” she
writes, in the short piece “Anything May Take the Form of a Cup,” “but there is
a town / on the edge of a fossil bed.” Set as a triptych of numbered sections,
her poems are sharp, but not overpowering, providing a deep and abiding calm
across loss, history and human distance. See my full review here.

49. Ronna Bloom, In a Riptide: I was curious to go
through Toronto poet and educator Ronna Bloom’s latest, In a Riptide
(Kingston ON: Brick Books, 2025), aware that she’s had a stack of published
collections since I first discovered her work through her debut, Fear of the
Ride (Ottawa ON: Carleton University Press, 1996) and follow-up, Personal
Effects (Toronto ON: Pedlar Press, 2000). She’s published a few more titles
since those days, including the recent A Possible Trust: The Poetry of Ronna
Bloom, selected with an introduction by Phil Hall (Waterloo ON: Wilfrid
Laurier University Press, 2023). “I’m not just feeling,” the poem “Don’t Be
Superficial, ‘Cause We’ll Soon Find Out” in this new collection offers, “I’m seeing.
/ And I’m here, committed to breathing, / joy, and painting, until there’s
nothing left.” Composed as an assemblage of first-person narratives, Bloom’s
sketchworks write on illness and age and all that comes with it, but resist
lyric closure or expectation. “I turn to look at myself / and wait for one of
us to speak.” she writes, to close the short poem “Area 3.” Or, two pages
prior, as she closes the first of two parts of the poem “Vulnerable to,”
writing: “I resist poetic redemption. Let it be this.” There is something of
the document, of a kind of meditative reportage, to Bloom’s lyrics, utilizing
the space of the lyric to recollect, collect or leave one’s mark. “I need to
write closer to the truth,” she writes, as part of the extended poem “The Party,”
“not the wished-for truth. / To be roughed up a bit. Stop protecting myself
from the end. / It’s an end not an ending.” Mortality is there, but it was
always there, and this is Bloom, writing from within a particular moment, a
particular period of time and of life, without urgency, but attempting a
clarity and a comprehension, so that she might be able to move forward. “Please
tell us, they said, if you will leave the light on,” she writes, as part of “Is
It Safe?,” “if you’ll come back, / what you did here and with whom, / and will
we be lovely, will we be lonely, / will we be lucky?” See my full review here.

50. Khashayar “Kess” Mohammadi, The Book of Interruptions: The fifth
full-length collection from queer, Toronto-based, Iranian-born poet, writer and
translator Khashayar “Kess” Mohammadi, is The Book of Interruptions
(Hamilton ON: Wolsak and Wynn 2025), following on the heels of their
full-length debut, Me, You, Then Snow (Guelph ON: Gordon Hill Press,
2021), the dos-a-dos WJD [conjoined with The OceanDweller, by
Saeed Tavanaee Marvi, trans. from the Farsi by Mohammadi] (Gordon Hill Press,
2022), the collaborative G (with Klara du Plessis; Windsor ON:
Palimpsest Press, 2023) and solo collection Daffod*ls (Pamenar Press,
2023), as well as a plethora of chapbooks. Gestural and expansive, there is an
element of worldbuilding to Mohammadi’s lyric, one that returns the structure
to the crossed-out (or interrupted) vowel through their use of the * symbol
from prior work (specifically ), writing a narrative structure concurrently
fragmented, populated and isolated, swirling amid staccato struggles with faith
and cities, queer experience and a litany of restless, thoughtful observations
around feeling unsettled in a secular Toronto, while holding on to a cultural
history of the poem that connects to that stretches back thousands of years.
With each collection, Mohammadi furthers a complexity of their engagement with
the long poem, the book-length accumulated lyric, a trajectory that is as
striking as it is propulsive. And yet, each work begins fresh, composed with an
open curiosity, and an array of questions, some new, and others, that need to
be asked more than once, for the sake of a broader, even ongoing, response. See my full review here.

51. Fenn Stewart, women & roosters: The second
full-length collection by Vancouver poet and editor Fenn Stewart, following a
trio of chapbooks (including one with above/ground press) and a full-length
debut, Better Nature (Toronto ON: BookThug, 2017), is women &
roosters (Book*hug Press, 2025), a book-length lyric suite that furthers
her ongoing explorations and critiques of colonized space. “I want to put my
foot but there’s nothing there to stand on like a two-by-four that rotted out
of the deck my uncle’s fixing with leftover bits of cedar gone like a rotten
tooth from a head that wants its tooth back gone like a man with a wife gone
like the sleeping bag from the back of my dad’s car in high school” she writes,
in an almost breathless rush, early on in the collection. At times, the prose
is subtle, quiet, beautifully straightforward; other times, propulsive, almost
breathlessly so, rushing “I learned (from T’uy’tanat-Cease Wyss) that
huckleberry bushes are much, much older than you think. It takes like a hundred
years for them to get as tall as me, and I’m not tall. When we were kids, there
was a family that wouldn’t let their kids eat huckleberries. Blueberries are
blue, they said firmly to their children, so those aren’t huckleberries. You
can’t eat them: they’re poisonous, because they’re red, and they’re not
huckleberries. They are, though—I’ve been eating them all my life, and I’m
still here.” women & roosters is composed in a structure akin to a
journal, offering self-contained entries that build and meander, ebb and flow,
offering certain echoes of titles such as George Bowering’s George,
Vancouver (Weed/Flower Press, 1970) to K.I. Press’ Pale Red Footprints
(Pedlar Press, 2001), Lisa Robertson’s The Weather (New Star Books,
2001) to Kate Sutherland’s The Bones Are There (Book*hug, 2020),
although Stewart’s title is composed as a journal, instead of from
a journal or archive. Perhaps a more apt comparable would be Ottawa poet Sandra
Ridley’s Vixen (Book*hug Press, 2023) [see my review of such here] (which
is fitting, as Ridley was Stewart’s editor for this collection); although
Ridley’s collection was composed via more overt lyric fragments over Stewart’s
lyric prose, the overall structures both provide a flow between sections,
moving across a slow and lengthy distance, and a horizon one can’t necessarily
see until there. See my full review here.

52. Rahat Kurd, The Book of Z: As the back cover of
Vancouver poet, writer, editor and cultural critic Rahat Kurd’s The Book of
Z writes: “For a thousand years the story of Zulaykha – ‘the wife of Aziz’
in the Qur’an – and her passion for Yusef has been celebrated in classical and
contemporary Persian and Urdu poetry, in Muslim folk traditions, and in Persian
and Mughal miniature painting. At the same time, as the Biblical ‘wife of
Potiphar’ she has been just as indelibly cast as temptress in misogynistic cautionary
tales and canonical Western art. Rahat Kurd writes in the vividly imagined
voice of a Zulaykha who considers her Abrahamic lineage from its estranged and
fragmented reality, asking what consolation human desire and divine longing
might offer our shared present tense.” Zulaykha is a figure found depicted in
both the Biblical Old Testament and the Qur’an, and, as Arizona-based Religious
scholar Agnès Kefeli offers, “in the biblical and Qur’anic interpretations of
Joseph’s story, Potiphar’s wife bears all the blame for sin and disappears
quickly from the narrative.” Alternate versions of her narrative, whether
through Turkish or Persian literature, aren’t nearly so harsh. Still, there is
something compelling in the way Kurd seeks agency for Zulaykha through The
Book of Z, furthering a lineage of literary works that seek to provide a
perspective that counterpoints and contradicts the male gaze, whether
Dominican-British author Jean Rhys lifting Mr. Rochester’s first wife, the
Creole heiress Antoinette Cosway, from Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre
(1847) in her Wide Sargasso Sea (1966), or Montreal poet Susan Elmslie
writing André Breton’s surrealist muse in her I, Nadja, and Other Poems
(London ON: Brick Books, 2006). Through Kurd Zulaykha is finally provided, one
might say, access to her own story. “As a girl I wished for a small space of my
own. A perch above a vista; a safe enclosure. Jami says I was the daughter of a
Maghribi king,” Kurd’s Zulaykha writes, in a letter to Yusef, “but I lacked
royal inclinations: to gaze on meadows and mountain peaks and breathe, mine,
all mine, to discern the glacial age in a sip of icy river water, to give
my attendants the order, prepare the next expedition.” Composed through
opening poem, “In the Subjunctive Mood for Love,” and sections held as
sequence, suites or otherwise clusters of lyric, prose poem and the ghazal:
“Zulaykha, Protagonist,” “Dear Yusuf,” “Zulaykha Addresses the Patriarchs,”
“Ghalib Praises My Dream of Yusuf,” “Zulaykha Surveys Her Art History,” “Zulaykha
Considers Her Options,” “Zulaykha Alone,” “Ashura,” “Akhlaq,” “Inheritance,”
“Zulaykha Is Floored by Emily Dickinson’s Poem 1311,” “Emily Dickinson’s Work
Ethic” and final poem, “Introspective Ghazal.” Exploring form as well as
narrative, Kurd offers prose poem sequences, explorations through the lyric
fragment, akin to Dickinson. She offers declarative passages and structures and
patterns adapted into English patter, comparable to the German-language prose
constructions that American poet and translator Rosmarie Waldrop adapted into
her English-language prose lyric. Kurd offers a rich and expansive blending of
traditions and concerns through her engagement with Zulaykha, including her own
homage to the ghazal, specifically referencing the classic Urdu poet of the
form, Mirza Asadullah Beg Khan (1797–1869), commonly known as Mirza Ghalib. As
she offers, as part of her “Introspective Ghazal”: “Could what passed between
them be called a mere glance / if ex post facto legal jargon hid its a priori
guarantee of sex? // I honour the poets and painters in whose mystic hearts /
Zulaykha’s fidelity persists, exalting a spirituality of sex [.]” See my full review here.

53. Scott Jackshaw, Stigmata: The full-length poetry
debut by Edmonton-based poet, scholar and editor Scott Jackshaw is Stigmata
(Vancouver BC: Talonbooks, 2025), an expansive long poem across five sections
of lyric stagger, staccato and extended gestures. “something must be put into
phrases,” begins the poem “Reparation,” “leans into my distant splinter, a door
/ prolapses, I spoil my crust with dirt // with the water stains on my ceiling,
lamp full of moths / bending floor of my desire [.]” Across a tapestry of
gestures, examinations and explorations, Jackshaw’s lyric multitudes include an
element of the monologue, of performance, blending the divine, desire and the
profane across a meditative and performative theology of action and
interaction. Composing a narrative line of point and counterpoint, Jackshaw’s
moments ping against each other, offering a book composed with opening and
closing poems, two cluster-sections of lyrics, and a further lyric sequence,
the title poem, held at mid-point. As the ten-part title sequence opens: “In
the episteme of grief many worlds will resemble a thread. I go down on a local
prophet. As the spirit moves I’m carried along with his breath.” In Christian
mysticism, the stigmata links back to the nail-wounds on the body of the
crucified Christ, the mark seen as one’s mystical union with Christ’s
suffering, but also referring to any physical mark or sign of a particular
disease or suffering. Through Jackshaw, the mark and moments of physicality in
their extended thought-clusters and prose sequences a theology conjoined with
sexuality, offering a lyric intermingling terrible sex and “the cult of the
wound,” noise and grief, confession and prayer, writing, in the opening poem,
“The Mystical Theology”: “I made a list of bright red holes.” The poems,
Jackshaw’s lyrics, point and counterpoint, offering an ebb and flow declarative
gestures, composing a book-length residue, both tender and profane, of what
happens, what is possible and the residue that remains, after all of the happening
has subsided. See my full review here.

54. Billy-Ray Belcourt, The Idea of An Entire Life: The latest
from Vancouver-based writer and academic Billy-Ray Belcourt, a member of the
Driftpile Cree Nation in northwest Alberta and Canada’s first First Nations
Rhodes Scholar, is the poetry collection The Idea of An Entire Life
(Toronto ON: McClelland and Stewart, 2025). “How we exist in the world /
depends on how we describe it.” begins the opening poem in the collection,
“AUTOFICTION.” The poems in this collection are quietly gestural,
earth-shaking, precise and performative, offering a layering of direct
statements, narrative storytelling and subtle truths. “Picture the women
waiting at the forest’s centre,” Belcourt writes, as part of the poem
“20TH-CENTURY CREE HISTORY,” “their hands / folded into little coffins. // Not
even the snow falls with such imprecise hunger.” There is a way that Belcourt
has of stitching together the present moment with threads of memory and
history, writing declarative details of and around Queer identity, family
history and survival, utilizing factual details as building blocks into
something larger, deeper. As any poem might require, in that particular moment.
“I want to call attention to the dead,” he writes, as part of the extended
sequence “THE CRUISING UTOPIA SONNETS,” “to the barely / living. I want to
remind you of the gravity and / the challenge of responding to the world, of
simply / being in the world.” There is a dream-like quality to elements of
these poems, blended with concrete realities, each side complementing the other
in quite striking ways, hitting all the right notes of lovely, of devastating,
of loss and heartbreak and wonder. These are poems of witness, of memory; of
documentation; a book of the whole world, the whole body, an approach that
seems to be how he approaches the books of his I’ve seen to date, including
elements of his entire world in that particular moment into the work. This is,
arguably, what the best work is supposed to, each poem and line offering a
different facet, a different fragment, of something far larger and more
expansive as a unified whole. A book of an entire life, indeed. See my full
review here.

55. Drew McEwan, tours, variously: The latest
from Toronto poet Drew McEwan, following Repeater (Toronto ON: BookThug,
2012) and If Pressed (BookThug, 2017), is the long-awaited tours,
variously (Vancouver BC: Talonbooks, 2025), a book-length suite structured
as a kind of call-and-response between extended lyric sections: “a tour,
variously,” “exit strategy,” “a tour, variously,” “arger’s interiors,” “a tour,
variously,” “theory of rooms” and “a tour, variously.” “I brace another
entryway within a room.” the opening sequence begins, “You frame the
performance of a beginning.” Described on the back cover as “a guided tour, a
tour of a series of empty rooms,” the open-ended complexity of tours,
variously does read as an exploration of space, of being, moving between an
uncertainty of rooms. In the first section, a bit further along: “My madness is
the madness of sequence.” The ebbs and flows of tours, variously hold an
array of threads of awareness around depictions, rhetorical function and
narrative gesture. “Without the ‘now’ of standardized speech,” she writes, “the
/ loiterers drag bruised aphorisms. Or so say the / lawyers on the courthouse’s
brutalist concrete / steps. Or so say the courthouse’s brutalist / concrete
steps. Either way the difference / amounts only to the distance between arrival
/ and departure lounges.” tours, variously is composed as a long poem
talking out self-aware elements of self and being around language and depiction
(“Has my narration become cold and inhuman?”), writing an exploration of
betweenness, becoming and having become, having been the whole time, achieving
an exploration not of uncertainty but of seeking, plumbing the depths of
language into a solid ground. See my full review here.

56. ryan fitzpatrick, No Depression in Heaven: The latest
from Calgary-returned (by way of Edmonton, Toronto and Vancouver) poet and
editor ryan fitzpatrick is No Depression in Heaven (Vancouver BC:
Talonbooks, 2025), a collection that follows and furthers a more overt
Alberta-centred cultural thread, as established in their prior collection, Sunny
Ways (Toronto ON: Invisible Publishing, 2023) [see my review of such here]:
a collection of longer pieces that included writing prompted by and through
Edward Burtynsky’s “massively scaled photographs” documenting and depicting the
Alberta Tar Sands. In a recent article in the Calgary Guardian,
fitzpatrick describes No Depression in Heaven as “a ‘poetry LP’ of
improvisatory pieces that works through the history and forms of country
music.” Set in two clusters of extended poems, “Side A” and “Side B,” the
structure and content of fitzpatrick’s latest plays off the Alberta
near-stereotypical ethos of “country and western music”—very different from,
say, Dennis Cooley’s Country Music: New Poems (Kelowna BC: Kalamalka
Press, 2004) or Zane Koss’ recent Country Music (Invisible Publishing,
2025), not to mention any other of the multitude of prairie poets over the
years approaching bluegrass riffs on the lonesome cowboy or open, empty prairie
(numerous of which, we now know, were deliberately-placed ideas across the North
American prairie by a variety of racist government agents and agendas, to push
First Nations peoples “out of the way” for wave upon wave of settler occupation).
And yet, one can see linkages in fitzpatrick’s latest to the poems in Robert
Kroetsch’s “Country and Western” section of his Completed Field Notes
(Edmonton AB: University of Alberta Press, 2002), each poet offering their own
section of lyrics composed in more overt country song-stanza shapes. “It won’t
be long ‘til value streaks / Right through White City’s square,” fitzpatrick
writes, “With fifty miles of elbow room / On either side to spare [.]” See
my full review here.
57. Eric Schmaltz, I Confess: From Halifax-based poet,
critic and editor Eric Schmaltz comes I Confess (Toronto ON: Coach House
Books, 2025), a book-length poetic expanse that follows an array of chapbooks,
as well as his full-length debut, SURFACES (Picton ON: Invisible
Publishing, 2018), and critical titles including I Want to Tell You Love, A
Critical Edition by bill bissett and Milton Acorn (co-edited with
Christopher Doody; Calgary AB: University of Calgary Press, 2021). Produced
with an “Afterword” by American-based New Zealand poet, editor, academic and
critic Orchid Tierney, there’s an enormous amount of play through Schmaltz’s I
Confess; play, resistance, confession, self-awareness, visual expansiveness
and lyric truth. It is as though he, as a poet who leans far more into
experimental and conceptual forms, attempted to approach lyric’s “confessional
mode” from an entirely different perspective, pulling apart the bones to thus
reassemble into something else. “Remember, you can be as nervous as you like.”
he writes, in his own call-and-response, “Nervousness and deception look
different. // Do not move. Tell me when you would like to begin.” There are
those who might see the confessional lyric as an exhausted form, although
through Schmaltz, a whole new life is introduced. Through text, photographs,
visual text, waveforms, erasure, utterance, polygraph charts and accumulation,
Schmaltz explores the tensions of truth and the body across the experimental
lyric; exploring certainty and uncertainty, as he investigates text-forms and
perceived truth, attention, poetry and poetic form. A caveat, whether
descriptor or warning, by the author at the offset, offers: “This book is a
document of truth’s performance under duress. // Some of what you will read is
true; the rest is poetry.”In
many ways, the core of the book’s content is familiar—who am I and how did I
get here—but examined through a unique blend of experimental and confessional,
each side wrestling for a kind of control that might not be possible. Given the
foundation for this particular mode of inquiry is the use of polygraph, it
introduces a whole other layer of tension, of resistance: “I confess,” as the
poem, the pages, repeat. “We’re going to focus on some background questions.”
Schmaltz writes, “This part of the session ensures that you are able to speak
truthfully and that you are mentally and physically fit to proceed with the
polygraph test today. // Please answer the following questions truthfully.”
There are occasionally ways through which certain conceptual poetry-based works
can articulate human elements more deeply, more openly, than the lyric mode,
something I felt as well through Christian Bök’s The Xenotext Book 1
(Coach House Books, 2015) [see my review of such here], and Schmaltz manages a
dual-core through this work that counterpoints brilliantly, working from the
most basic of human questions across a structure of the nature of being, the
nature of expansive, articulated, inarticulate and impossible truth, composed
across an expansive bandwidth. See my full review here.