Wednesday, April 1, 2020

D.A. Lockhart : The Algonquin Park Experiments, by Brittany Renaud


845 Press Chapbooks, 2019


There was a time, decades ago, that I lived close enough to Algonquin Park and that near north of Ontario that I would often find myself slipping up the highways past Bancroft, past Maynooth to that great wild place that seems to rest at the centre of Ontario’s notions of itself. And it was as glorious and breathtaking as the best A.Y. Jackson or JEH MacDonald painting, but it was also mundane, infuriating, and full of the humour and pleasure of being loose in the world. I suppose if one were to experiment with the physical place that is Algonquin Park and do so in the form of poetry, one would only be successful in doing so by encapsulating all of that in words. And this is precisely London-based writer Brittany Renaud accomplishes in this deeply experiential poetry chapbook.
          I say that the work is experiential in that Renaud utilizes the truly everyday aspects of our speech and writing acts to craft an ongoing engagement with the physical place of Algonquin. These pieces come in the form transcribed snippets of conversations, receipts from travel, lists, and notes. Take for example “Camping by the Numbers 2016,” in which the speaker lists dates, times, prices and items in transaction lists that while odd in first light give way to an arching narrative of a voyage. The reader revisits this camping trip in the very familiar fashion that often follows campers or travelers around for years. This is the receipt trail we often carry with us. Each one of them glimmers to the experiences around those transactions. 
           Make no mistake that these are not just simply found poems, but rather wonderfully constructed engagements with their subject material. We as readers are brought through their familiarity to the experience of an act visit and trip through the park. Yet the strength and reliability afforded to the collection of these foundish poem moments opens up a seeming veracity of more sustained prose sections such as “It Was a Dark and Scary Night.” Here we witness the absurd violence that Canadians often hint at existing in the woods. With flesh hungry trees and flamethrower toting park rangers, the exercises reads as possible, somewhat horrifying, The form here does mirror the campside joke and story telling experienced in campfires. And in the end we are left with the hazy sense that even most absurd could be real because it was spoken into the world.
          In its experiential and rooted nature I see much in common between Renaud’s work here and the great American nature poets of Gary Snyder and Philip Whalen. All three of these writers take us along on their voyage into the world outside our towns and cities. Although Renaud’s work does not follow into the romantic vistas of zen infused nature of her American counterparts, there is an openness to her work that lets the experience of it all to filter in between what is being shared and who is receiving it. In this way the work provides for the same sort of meditative space that the physical space of Algonquin affords all so many of her visitors. And in this, I would say that you would be remiss if did not spend time with this work by emerging Souwesto wordsmith.   




D.A. Lockhart is the author Devil in the Woods (Brick Books, 2019), Wenchikaneit Visions (Black Moss Press, 2019), and Breaking Right (Porcupine's Quill, 2020). His work has appeared widely throughout Turtle Island including Best Canadian Poetry 2019, The Malahat Review, Grain, CV2, TriQuarterly, The Fiddlehead, and Belt. He is pùkuwànkoamimëns of the Moravian of the Thames First Nation. Lockhart currently resides at Waawiiyaatanong where he is the publisher at Urban Farmhouse Press.

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