This is the second book of poetry by one of Canada's young first nations poets. Philip Kevin Paul's first book won the 2004 Dorothy Livesay Award for Poetry. Here, Paul continues to draw upon the rich oral culture and traditions of his people. From the eye of a whale rising from the deep, to an albino pigeon being nursed back to health, Paul's work addresses nature, family and traditions that get passed on from generation to generation. A raccoon's eyes become 'holy doors of lost keys' and sockeye swim upstream. With elegance and wisdom, Paul speaks of 'the stories gone sad/singing to the hunger that made them/running past the voices no longer speaking.'
This is the second book of poetry by one of Canada's young first nations poets. Philip Kevin Paul's first book won the 2004 Dorothy Livesay Award for Poetry. Here, Paul continues to draw upon the rich oral culture and traditions of his people. From the eye of a whale rising from the deep, to an albino pigeon being nursed back to health, Paul's work addresses nature, family and traditions that get passed on from generation to generation. A raccoon's eyes become 'holy doors of lost keys' and sockeye swim upstream. With elegance and wisdom, Paul speaks of 'the stories gone sad/singing to the hunger that made them/running past the voices no longer speaking.'
Philip Kevin Paul is a member of the WSÁ,NEC Nation from the
Saanich Peninsula on Vancouver Island. His work has been published
in BC Studies, Literary Review of Canada, Breathing Fire: Canada's
New Poets and An Anthology of Canadian Native Literature in
English. Paul has worked with the University of Victoria's
linguistics department to ensure the preservation of the SENCOTEN
language.
Philip Kevin Paul's second book of poetry, Little Hunger, was
shortlisted for a 2009 Governor General's Literary Award. His first
book of poetry, Taking the Names Down from the Hill, won the 2004
Dorothy Livesay Award for Poetry.
Philip Kevin Paul, in Little Hunger, uses family stories from a
tradition of oral culture and places them across the landscape so
we can feel the contemporary resonance of history. Even the rain
transmits the past and inflects longing ...
-- Jacqueline Turner, The Georgia Straight
Philip Kevin Paul's connection with the Saanich Peninsula -- the
land of his family, and his lifelong home -- is clear just from
reading the contents listing of Little Hunger, his second
collection of poetry, which features poems like 'Descent into
Saanich' and 'Brentwood Bay.' And, indeed, the poems themselves
make that connection even more clear, delving into Paul's
experience of the land and the people of the area, and the
experience of the Wsanec people.
-- Peninsula News Review
In Little Hunger, his second collection, Philip Kevin Paul
continues the project of his first book, Taking the Names Down from
the Hill (2003) -- although here he writes in an even more focused
manner. This project is to assert and evoke the connectedness of
land, culture, and family in Central Saanich, British Columbia,
north of Victoria, the traditional territory of the WSÁ, NEC
Nation. The result is an intensely local set of poems that assume
the place to be central to the author's personal and cultural
identity. ... In "Descent into Saanich," he writes of approaching
the local airport. In flight he cannot hear the sound of the water
"as it slides against / the east end of our smallest islands," a
sound he "know[s] by heart" and that "lays claim to [him], a child
of Saanich." Paul's poetry is likewise claimed by place. At times
his world seems private, scarcely comprehensible to outsiders; the
poems, like [Gregory] Scofield's, also depict familiar sorrows.
--Nicholas Bradley, Canadian Literature
Fine lyric moments and an admirable and generous awareness
characterize Philip Kevin Paul's Little Hunger. These poems inhabit
and embody deep resonances of family, place and language. A
beautiful congruence of personal exploration, cultural endurance
and human experience.
-- Governor General's Award for Poetry Jury, 2009
If you lived with Kevin Paul, you would want to be as careful every
morning as you are on April Fool's Day. He slides puns into serious
conversations deft as a pickpocket, so you have to be on your toes
when you talk to him. He's a trickster and he knows it; he is also
one of the most original voices in Canadian poetry today. One of
the reasons for the success of Paul's poetry may be that he is so
certain of who he is. A member of the W,SÁNE� nation, Paul was
raised by his family in a traditional way and speaks SEN�OTEN as
his first language. Despite his persistent humour in person, there
is a seriousness to his poetry that is the weight of deep
meditation about self and place. ... The poems in Little Hunger
pick up from where his first collection, Taking the Names Down From
the Hill left off. That book won him the 2004 Dorothy Livesay award
for poetry. This one should also earn Kevin Paul the attention he
deserves.
-- Jay Ruzesky, The Goose
Philip Kevin Paul conjures contemporary life among the Saanich
people with intelligence and perception. Paul's voice is honest
about the challenges of living in this community with its
addictions, crime, and multi-faceted feelings of loss ... Yet this
awareness doesn't distort his affection for the people who form the
community, or their legends, language, and traditions, or the land
that enfolds them.
--Paul W. Harland, Journal of Canadian Poetry
... Paul is able to communicate a precise, intimate vision of his
world. Central to this book are his family members. I was
overwhelmed by the poem about bathing in Saanich Inlet with his
uncle ('Waiting for the Sun'), the ritual unexplained but the love
between them clear - including how he teases his uncle about his
age ... Philip Kevin Paul's lyric poems are lovely, pensive and
lyrical in the best senses of both words.
-- Book Addiction
Philip Kevin Paul's book Little Hunger is a strange and often
delightfully surreal bundle of stories and vignettes.
-- Bashu Naimi-Roy, Re:verse
Paul...writes in a poetic voice that is highly attuned to sublime
elements of nature, hinting at the presence of the supernatural in
our surroundings.It is through interactions with nature that Paul
explores memories of an absent father, as an exquisite poem Out of
Place, in which he recalls his father nursing and albino pigeon and
catching an albino salmon:
How close Dad lived
to what he couldn't know:
the albino pigeon, an unwatched bird,
the albino salmon we watched
until it went to deep for us to see
its last white flicker
was what we held in other darknesses ...
Not since Robert Frost's poem Design or Herman Melville's novel
Mobyd Dick has the discovery of an eerie whiteness in nature been
used so effectively to evoke an uncanny human psychological
response.
-- Harold Heft, The Montreal Gazette
Paul is a Saanich Indian who lives on Vancouver Island, and his
steadfast focus is on the traditions and values of his heritage.
These quiet, reflective poems on family and place have a
soft-spoken quality, but they still have plenty of lyrical impact
... In a way, Little Hunger is the voice of a community as much as
it is a single poet. Yet it's a singular voice indeed - and well
deserving of a place on the GG shortlist.
-- Barb Carey, Toronto Star
Paul's second poetry collection continues almost seamlessly the
creative work of his first book, but with a lighter vision and more
playful rhythms. It also reaffirms the mature poetic voice that
emerged in Paul's first collection, which presented a fully formed
world to readers.
-- Jennifer Dales, Arc Poetry Magazine
This is poetry written by an exceptional poet ... Life is a little
emptier when we have lost touch with our world, when it doesn't
affect us, when it isn't as close to us as it is to Paul. We need
his, and other voices like his, to remind us - not of what we've
lost, not of what we've given up in the name of progress, but of
what we can still have if we remember.
- John Herbert Cunningham, Prairie Fire
[T]he words jump off the page and straight into your heart ...
They're the kind of poems you go to again and again for comfort,
joy, or just to feel alive.
-- Starleigh Grass, Twinkle's Happy Place
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