Showing posts with label Shane Neilson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shane Neilson. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 1, 2021

Shane Neilson : Coast Mountain Foot, by Ryan Fitzpatrick

Ryan Fitzpatrick’s Rocky Mountain Opportunity: Coast Mountain Foot (Talonbooks, 2021) Abdicated Addressing Its Own Origins in Whiteness

 

[Editor's note: After this review was posted, the author of the piece admitted via twitter that this rather scathing review was deliberately composed as a prank tied to an argument he was making on his paywalled newsletter. I don't care for any prank, critical or otherwise, that exists at the expense of a writer or their work. I had presumed, somehow, that despite my disagreement with the argument presented, that it had been done thoughtfully, and in good faith. Apparently this was not the case. I leave the review standing as an example of the kind of review I no longer wish to publish, encourage or solicit.]

 

 

 

 

 

The bumpf of Coast Mountain Foot (CMF) bumpf explains the genesis of Ryan Fitzpatrick’s project: it “was written amid booms and busts through the messy perspectives of [Vancouver and Calgary] as they bleed into one another, refracting the gesture of George Bowering’s 1968 classic, Rocky Mountain Foot.” Cunning refraction can result in purposeful obscuration, though. It is with this point in mind that I shall interrogate Fitzpatrick’s choice of inspiration, Bowering, and refract its gestures of whiteness as they did not bleed into CMF.

Bowering’s book has been celebrated by SFU grad Allesandra Capperdoni as offering a “critical analysis of the insidious ways in which neoliberal ideology has entered Canada’s social and political stage through a ‘politics of space’ that relies upon, rather than disintegrates, the ‘absolute space’ produced by nationalist politics.” Rocky Mountain Foot may have met community standards of contemporary tolerance when Capperdoni’s paper was published in 2014, but surely anyone reading this sentence in 2021, due to the imperative of anti-racism in literary studies existing within the backdrop of ongoing Indigenous cultural genocide, might wonder if Bowering should have done more in 1968 than offer mere resistance to neoliberal ideology. It is as if he was unaware that neoliberal logic is always in conversation with other forms of oppression.

Is it wise to valorize in 2021, as Capperdoni does in 2014, a beloved (former) figure of the Canadian avant garde despite his eager subscription to a road too much taken in Canadian poetry, the Nature Poetry of Whiteness? The circumstance of CMF and its choice of inspiration is made even stranger when one considers that Fitzpatrick himself is on record on this point concerning another Canadian poet. When reviewing John Donlan’s Out All Day, he writes, “This poem leaves me wondering about Donlan’s invocation of an ‘us’ that he’s not necessarily included in and how that question of freedom is connected to his considerations of ecology. What would happen if nature poetry critically addressed its own whiteness?” That same provocation could very much apply to Rocky Mountain Foot. For her part, Capperdoni suggests that an adequate basis in anti-racism is afoot: “Playing with the lyric mode of poetic vision and the serial structure of postmodern poetry a la Spicer, the poetic sequence Rocky Mountain Foot disassembles the landscape machine of the picturesque and the sublime of nationalist poetry by showing their imperial logic.” But as anyone knows, imperial logics are fundamentally structured by and around racism, and Capperdoni has little to say on the nexus between racism and colonialism because Bowering resolutely operates within the zone of whiteness, writing from within that familiar and staid old paradigm of nationalist Canadian literature.

The problems with appropriation and stolen land begin from the outset of Bowering’s dedication, characteristically christened a “non-dedication” from this Black Mountaineer:

No dedication is necessary,
but I would like to say hello to:

Chief Walking Eagle
Bob Edwards
Sitting Bull

Jabez Harry Bowering

(They were all there)

Let me do the anti-racist work that Fitzpatrick should have done as an ally and unpack Bowering’s non-dedication a little. The first of these names is somewhat obscure to a Google search, though Chief Walking Eagle – also known as Morley Beaver – seems to have truly been Indigenous based on this web entry, though my research here is admittedly quite cursory. Sitting Bull (Hunkpapa Lakota), of course, was a remarkable leader who resisted American colonization, including his involvement in the victory over Custer at Little Bighorn. He resided in southern Saskatchewan for a time because of pressure from U.S. authorities, which is presumably why Bowering felt it proper to invoke him. The other names in the list, though, are a different matter and they nicely bring into view Bowering’s whiteness problem.

Bob Edwards is a white-sounding name, although I wouldn’t know for sure. (You can imagine what a Google search turns up: white male after white male, infinite face after puffy face.) Jabez Harry Bowering is a known quantity, however. Judy Stoffman in the Literary Review of Canada fills us in: Bowering’s “first truly successful poem, ‘Grandfather’ (included in thirty-­one anthologies at last count), draws on a visit to see his snowy-­haired grandfather, ‘whipt out of England’ as a twelve-year-old orphan. Jabez Bowering built ‘children & churches’ across the prairies”. Thus Bowering, at the front of his text, deploys (at least) two Indigenous names alongside two white names, including the name of a man who actively contributed to the ongoing genocide of Indigenous peoples by erecting structures intended to colonize them through Christianity, a man related to Bowering himself! Thus how can Rocky Mountain Foot be justified as a source text in 2021 for any poet? Why, for example, did Bowering not write against systemic racism and cultural genocide in 1968? Why is there an implicit false equivalency made between a truly historic figure like Sitting Bull and the generic Bob Edwards? Indeed, why is an explicit equivalency drawn when Bowering says “[t]hey were all there”? The answer can only be the privileged ignorance of whiteness. Surely Bowering understands that Chief Walking Eagle, if part of the Stoney Nakoda First Nation, was part of Treaty 7? This dishonest treaty deprived Indigenous peoples the use of, and sovereignty over, their land. To claim that the most important fact of the non-dedication was the co-extensive existence of four names in the vicinity of the Rockies is irresponsible in the extreme, especially in the face of cultural genocide.[1]

Problems continue in Rocky Mountain Foot. One of the epigraphs is from Ed Dorn, who wrote the The Soshoneans: The People of the Basin-Plateau (1967), a book of flagrant cultural appropriation about the Soshone. Moreover, Dorn was a homophobic garbage person who created the “Aids Award for Poetry” in 1983, bestowing the prize upon Dennis Cooper, Clayton Eshleman, Robert Creeley, Steve Abbot, and Allen Ginsberg. A more fulsome description of this egregious act is warranted. The following is transcribed from Diarmud Hester’s Wrong: A Critical Biography of Dennis Cooper:

In 1983 Rolling Stock, a cultural newspaper published in Boulder, Colorado, by Black Mountain poet Ed Dorn and his wife, Jennifer, announced in their fifth issue the winners of the 1983 AIDS Awards for Poetry. In recognition of what the editors and their collaborator Tom Clark called “AN EPIDEMIC OF IDIOCY on the poetry scene,” awardees were offered a prize, large and luridly depicted on the page: a beaker of blood, presumably contaminated with the AIDS virus, its infected contents overflowing. “To date 1300 cases of AIDS POETRY have been reported in the U.S.,” read the caption.

That Bowering quoted from Dorn 15 years before Dorn outed himself as a raging homophobe is not the problem. That he quoted from Dorn after the wildly appropriative text The Shoshoneans is another matter. The problem is that neither the egregiously homophobic moment or the gross cultural appropriation is not recognized or interrogated in a book in 2021 that overtly models itself after Rocky Mountain Foot. How is Ryan Fitzpatrick an ally to Indigenous peoples of this land that we whites call Canada? How is he an ally to intersectional identities like Two-Spirit Indigenous people?   

Alas, these aren’t the only problems to be found in Bowering’s serially troublesome book. For example, there is the “disappearing Indian” trope:

That is the earth, the earth
that promoted flowers before men came,

that lay in a firm hold of grass
before the dust-belching tractors,

the hate-belching preachers,
the greedy hands of chiropracters (sic).

The earth, brown footpath to the mountains,
how it must have lookt,

with bushes, airy burst of trees,
birds among them, buffalo guarded, unguarded,

great herds or family groups,
no fences, no great oil-sucking machines

(. . .)

None of this: earth, sky, water, fire
in the sky at night, that’s all,

untold millennia gone by,
unbelievable tons of snow, floods of spring,

bury this present enormity
in a second of time,

apply the soft sticking lips
of the past, spew this away,

leave a troublesome scar for
the future industry of the sunflower . . .

The ancestral stewards of the land are where, exactly, in this representation? Are we to believe that the land was unpopulated before settlers came? When Bowering does do the work of direct representation, things are no better. Indigenous people are like the ones in his poem “indians in calgary”, which reads in its entirety:

On Saturday afternoon
they walk, bow-legged jeans
down sidewalks of hippy bell bottoms.
 

The Indians are skinny, gloves placed
in their back pockets.

Their style reflects from the shop
windows, a gust of narrow
mountain wind

among the steel haystacks.

For whom is Bowering writing? What is his purpose? Is he doing anti-racist work? Is he calling for land back? Or is he merely decorating his book’s frame of oblivious whiteness with Indigenous bodies that are vague, “indian” only in name? What’s with the bottom of the same page just quoted, where this intertextual quote appears: “There’s a man who can ride him – an Indian named Tom Three Persons. But he’s in jail.” Indians are ghostly deracinated presences on city streets – or they’re in jail?

Despite its blatant deficiencies, the stalwart Capperdoni tries to cast the book as somehow progressive on an anti-racism / stolen land front:

The near extermination of the buffalo, co-terminous with indigenous economy, has paved the way for the defacement of the land, now turned into energy reservoir for Canada’s (and increasingly North America’s) industrialization engine. . . [Bowering] reminds readers not only of the systemic dispossession that makes ‘development’ and ‘progress’ possible, but the ongoing debt that the nation-state owes Native people. In light of the grievances of Aboriginal peoples and the ressentiment voiced through increasing political action at the present time, this debt begs for something more than an empty gesture of reconciliation or healing: Are we willing to return the land to its original inhabitants? Which measures are we willing to adopt to redress historical injustices?

Indeed, these are the key questions to ask any contemporary poetics context, and I am glad Capperdoni asked them. As can be seen from the quotations provided, Bowering in 1968 is aware of none of these questions and Capperdoni seems to know this, for the sentence that follows the block quote above is: “Meanwhile, the poetic eye can only witness and document the ongoing transformation of land and place into a space for consumption”, a statement followed by a deflationary Bowering fragment that develops the Cadillac automobile as icon of capitalism amidst the backdrop of the Rockies.

Is witness all the poetic eye can do in the face of stolen land? Can the poetic eye not do anti-racist work? Can it not demand that the stolen land be returned? Bowering’s abdication surely requires unpacking in any derivative text that wears its awareness of whiteness on its sleeve, as Ryan Fitzpatrick’s CMF is and does. Consider CMF’s “The Energy in These Streets”:

Nenshi wins
in a squeaker
against Bill Smith[2]
 

(a faceless
conservative flack
preaching low taxes).
 

The guy
I’m next to
pipes up:
 

“Don’t people
like that
East Indian guy?
 

Like, he gets
what Calgarians
seem to be about.”

There’s a
weird tension
in that.
 

In the way
Nenshi’s set up
as not Calgarian
 

but also
a positive force
for Calgarians.
 

But the guy’s
legitimately happy
to meet me –
 

another person
from Alberta
(he’s from Edmonton).
 

A bizarre
race-swapped refraction
of that scene
 

in Dionne Brand’s
A Map to the
Door of No Return
 

where she
and a friend
find kinship
 

with the driver
and a
Salish woman
 

through forms
of relation found
in spatial loss.
 

Except all
I get
is discomfort
 

(. . .)

though I get
there’s no
way to divest
 

from automatically
beneficial structures
of whiteness.

Doesn’t CMF enact the beneficial structure of whiteness by piggybacking on a beloved white figure of the (former) Canadian poetry avant garde, George Bowering? Despite its name-dropping of whiteness, the interior of CMF is a strangely evacuated zone, one that doesn’t take Bowering to task. As it happens, the only George that Fitzpatrick mentions inside CMF is George Vancouver:

Robert Bateman
too political
for city hall,
 

but when does
George Vancouver’s
statue come down?
 

He stands
on the steps
of city hall,
 

looking like
he discovered
something.

Toppling a memorial to colonialism is important work, but isn’t dismantling capitalist projects that participate in systemic racism like Rocky Mountain Foot equally important? Remember: Bowering’s text was published by the then-overwhelmingly white-authored McClelland and Stewart.

Perhaps the imperial logic of capitalism sunk the entire enterprise at concept stage. Consider: Talonbooks, who published CMF, publishes Bowering in the present. Fitzpatrick reviewed a Talon release – Gladys Hindmarch: The Collected Works – in 2020 with nary a discouraging word. Criticizing from within the circle might get one blacklisted, hence the clear white untouched space in the circle of influence, as clear as the stolen land at the foot of the Rocky Mountains, a space that whiteness built for its own purposes.

 

 

 

 

Shane Neilson runs a subscription-only poetry review-essay site, The Negative Review, that often covers the performativities of whiteness in Canadian poetry.

 

 



[1] Fitzpatrick knows this, though, which makes his use of Bowering without proper critique and contextualization all the more questionable. In his “Notes” he writes,

 

The colonial settlement of Calgary is on Treaty 7 territory, and that territory is the home of the Niitsitapi ᖹᐟᒧᐧᒣᑯ, Tsuut’ina, Stoney Nakoda, and Métis peoples. It’s ironic that I needed to move away to reflect on settler colonialism as an organizing fact about the place I was born. I remember the discomforting belatedness I felt as I attended events in Vancouver where Land Acknowledgements were already old hat. I learned over and over (and needed to learn over and over) that the colonial settlement of Vancouver is located on the unceded, Traditional, Ancestral Territories of the . . .

[2] Any relation to Bob Edwards?

Thursday, September 3, 2020

Geoffrey Nilson : Praise is not a shallow thing: poetry reviewing in late-capitalism







Hello Shane. It’s Geoffrey Nilson, your (almost) surname twin from the opposite left coast of the nation. Long-time reader (since 2001, your review in Event Magazine), first-time letter-er. I write poetry reviews too! What a small world, two guys in one country with (almost) the same last name both really in to poems? What even are the odds?

There are two reasons I believe your book Constructive Negativity to be required reading for anyone interested in poetry in this place called Canada. The first is that you have, as you write in the introduction, “landed on sure footing by writing the first book of Canadian literary criticism that covers dis/ability in a substantial way” (13). You address significant problems that plague our literary culture in spite of the exposure to yourself or your reputation, whether ableism at the heart of diversity, the proliferation of weaponized pain metaphors, or the ubiquity of alcohol in our industry. I love, too, that you have written about your poetics in spite of a reticence to do so. It has inspired me to write about my own and my family’s experiences with dis/ability (as well to engage my poetry reviews with dis/ability), which I think was probably one of your main goals of putting the collection together. I wish I could speak now to the immense importance of the materials on your own dis/ability and about poets who identify as dis/abled (particularly Roxanna Bennett, Alden Nowlan, and Marc Di Saverio), but that is another letter.

Which brings me to the second reason why Constructive Negativity is required reading. Overwhelmingly, the book leans toward an overall critique of what you call “prize culture,” composed mostly of previously published essays and poetry reviews in your unique and often satirical “negative register” (15). Why I think reading this material is so very important is not exactly why you might think. Poetry needs literary criticism like yours so we can know what antiquated forms to move away from. “You must change your genre,” (15) applies to you as well.

I admit I have a soft spot for the dis/ability section, given my own history of mental illness and drug addiction (a sector of dis/ability you seem to have left mostly out of your profile). As well, it hits home because both of my maternal grandparents were dis/abled: my grandfather a WW2 amputee, my grandmother chronically-ill from multiple sclerosis. Grandma lived in a long-term care home and Grandpa was like my official babysitter, the one who introduced me to poetry. He liked to read aloud from Dickens, Shakespeare, and one of his favourites, Robert Service. Back then I had no idea “The Cremation of Sam McGee” was supposed to be “bad” poetry. I didn’t know to scoff at the ballad form or the obvious rhymes. I just loved the sound of the words.

Sure, reading the poem now, it has not aged well, and Service’s casual racism in other places is inexcusable. These flaws however have not stopped “Sam McGee” from being added to the Canadian canon, given its continued editions, notoriety, and anthology inclusions. Beyond the aesthetics of opinion, the poem has this whole time been important. From the first stanza after the refrain the reader understands Sam McGee “was always cold, but the land of gold seemed to hold him like a spell” (In Fine Form), captured, incapacitated, willing to die from icy hubris for the capitalist wet dream come to life that was the Gold Rush Yukon. Even a die-hard CCF socialist like Grandpa could be seduced by myths.

Like writers with the myth of prize-winning poetry. What does prize-winning mean? Can you fill me in, Shane? I don’t believe you have given a strict break down in your book. I can’t tell you the five top qualities of a prize-winning poem, even though I’ve written a few. Here’s what I do know: it has nothing to do with if a poem is “good.”

The first time I won a writing contest I was twenty years old. It was also my first publication. Well there was that creative writing award at eighteen, but this seemed more important because it didn’t come from my high school. Appearing in subTerrain in the summer of 2001, “jack-knifed” was winner of the 10th Annual Last Poems Poetry Contest (now the Lush Triumphant Prize). I’m still shocked my fever-dream of a depression poem was chosen, cringe-worthy teenage violence and Lord of the Flies reference et al.

No, what I remember most is not that I wrote a “good” poem that was objectively better than the others that were entered, but that my specific poem made a connection with the right audience. When Maritime poet and fiction writer Tammy Armstrong, then living in Vancouver and editor at subTerrain, revealed she had championed my poem during the editorial process, it taught me an important lesson. Prize-winning doesn’t mean the “best” or what everyone likes. Prize-winning means the particular choice on the particular day the particular decision is made.

I’ve had a few almost-wins, too, in the spirit of full disclosure. Honourable mention for the Alfred G. Bailey Poetry Prize in 2015 stands out. Funny thing is, you won that year, Shane, for your then unpublished New Brunswick. I remember reading your familiar name on the announcement. I wasn’t disappointed to lose to you. I’m a fan! Most of all, I was pleased with any recognition for my strange, anti-capitalist ekphrasis, coming at a time when I really needed some positive reinforcement to bolster belief in my practice. Even if I had been upset, when I got around to reading some of the poems, how could I be disappointed with lines like: “Your bosom of earth is strewn with heavier shadows, New Brunswick” (CV2)? Please.

Maybe I’ve seen you as a sort of literary older brother, someone to follow out in the world, if not an influence per se, at least a guide for how to be as poet and critic. But I think following your lead might be over, now. Not knowing at all of this pseudo-brotherly arrangement we had, I do not blame you. Our poetics diverged; our critical practices are no longer alike; the only thing similar between us is that last name differentiated by a single vowel.

And that’s ok. The only constant in poetry is change. Or did I mess that up? No matter. I want to place a flower in the barrel of your gun. Prize or no prize, you will find your reader. You’ve got use your power for good. Shane, you are at your best as a critic, then; it’s right there in the words of Constructive Negativity. Not stifling your rage, but directing it at the power and structures which would keep your people (the dis/abled) subjugated, second-class product of the brand that is CanLit.  

Pushing an exclusive view of what poetry is, by deeming some poetry “good” and some “bad,” is nothing more than cultural poetic colonialism of the type perpetrated by settler-state syllabi for centuries. Furthermore, I believe this “evaluation” only matters to the market. And the market doesn’t care about us. The market cares about upholding the status quo only insofar as it continues to be profitable, and when something outside the status quo becomes profitable, the market quickly moves to adjust and capitalize. Negative aesthetics as the righteous voice against “bad” poetry has certainly been profitable. You have published hundreds of reviews (and many books) over twenty-plus years. Whether the capital accrued is monetary, is not the question. You have power in Canadian literature. 

You would love a negative review of Constructive Negativity, even calling for one in the text (73), but I don’t roll that way Shane. That approach would simply confirm the value you place on negativity as a critical tool. Instead I lean toward Robert Bringhurst who writes in the forward for Dennis Lee’s Heart Residence: Collected Poems 1967-2017: “Politics, when humanely conceived and practiced, is not a mode of social combat; it is friendship on a systematic scale.” Ditto for poetry reviewing.

Let’s halt the pretense of aesthetic evaluation and call negative reviewing what it is: promotional opinion writing, the stuff of business. Negative reviews sell. They get clicks and engagement. They promote the writer of the review and the publication in which it appears as much or more than the art they engage with. The most egregious hit pieces disguised as critical engagement (ex: the Roy Miki review in Constructive Negativity) speak in the same register as a Pitchfork music review. You use The Fiddlehead as a benchmark in your justification of the negative review, it being a journal that because of its practice of negative reviewing “quickly became a coveted place to publish poetry in Canada and remains so today,” (163) seventy-five years on.

It was the same with Pitchfork; from tiny music blog into multi-million dollar culture giant (now Condé Nast property) on the simple stock of one thing: the negative review. Their hyperbolic negativity, inclination to rip major artists, and obvious shifting preference for certain genres/styles are all legendary in the music business (taste a few here). Sure, I love a good skewering as much as the next reader. The whole point is that they’re extreme: no one believes them to be honest appraisals. They’re entertainment. Take the review for the sophomore album by Australian band Jet, whose biggest crime seems to be sounding like an AC/DC cover band trying to play The Beatles. Giving a 0.0 rating and making the review just a video of a chimpanzee peeing into its own mouth is crude, juvenile, and, yes, I have to admit, funny, but it isn’t healthy. I consume this kind of stuff and I want more in a toxic loop, like cultural junk food I regret the moment it hits my stomach.

Shane, your critical tone may be shaped by Orwell, Eliot, and Swift, but your negativity, I believe, has more in common with Pitchfork, Robert Christgau, and Lester Bangs, that kind of critic unafraid to sacrifice an art form they profess to love on the altar of taste. Your fervour to separate “good” from “bad” poetry does not acknowledge that aesthetic appraisal itself serves capital, the position that only if something is “good” is it “worth” our attention (and our money).

You understand the risks of “the dark side of evaluative criticism” that “sometimes masquerades as a pure aesthetics” (164), but it seems to me that you don’t care unless it hurts you or one of your own. You ridicule “post-modern questions like who is doing the judging? and who am I to speak? that are literary identity politics updates on John 8:7” (166), yet at the base level of humility, “let he who is without sin cast the first stone” is a pretty decent way to be in the world and, in contrast to some shit the Bible has on offer, sage advice.

Since I know you appreciate a little bit of critical inflammation, I counter with my own scriptural reference from Mathew 7:5: “first take the log out of your own eye, and then you will see clearly to take the speck out of your brother’s.”

“Prize culture” is not for poetry; it is for marketing books, for fundraising, for tax credits, for building subscription numbers. Prize culture is a manifestation of the capitalist realism Mark Fisher describes “as a belief—that there’s no alternative to capitalism,” that “all we can do is accommodate ourselves to the dominance of capitalism, and limit our hopes to contain its worst excesses…Capitalist realism is about a corrosion of social imagination and, in some ways, that remains the problem…we are only just beginning to be able to imagine alternatives” (k-punk).

To imagine an alternative reality free from neoliberal ideologies and dominance inherent to the market—of dis/ability, of diversity, of book publishing, of poetry and reviewing, of reading and of thought—to imagine that future possibility, is a radical, transgressive act. Let us be radical, then. Let us have our poetry culture shed its compulsion to dominate. Let us sing our poems to each other. To sing each other’s praises. Praise is not a shallow thing in a world without capital. I can feel that truth in my fucking skin.

For me, a new poetry is created with the publication of each new poem. I approach my critical assessments always with this fact in mind. I remind myself to come to a poem on its own terms, to let the poem be just what it is rather than what I prefer or believe to be “good.” I must find what it offers to teach and listen to how it expresses that knowledge. I must refrain from speaking at all until the poetry and I communicate. The critic has nothing without this.

Unless you and a poem are in communication, you can know nothing about it except what you put upon it. Unless you and a poem are in communication, you have no authority to pass judgement on its literary merit. When you and a poem are in communication, you will have no desire to judge at all. You will be in love.

“Leave us alone or be kind to us” (266), you write. Your fellow poets ask the same.

Shane, the exclusion practiced by Canadian literature and its prize culture toward the poets and poetry of dis/ability is the same exclusion you practice with your aesthetic battle against “bad” poetry. The battle itself is a manifestation of capitalist realism, where it is more conceivable to attack those with which we share fraternity than to challenge the system that pushes us to each other’s throats. It is a failure of imagination.

Thankfully, poets do imagination quite well.

ur pal in pomes,
geoffrey


A small note on form and citation: Much of the discussion around reviews and literary prizes takes place online, this essay included. Following Robert Creely’s dictum that “form is never more than an extension of content,” I leverage search marketing methodologies and Google PageRank to transfer “link juice” or “link equity” to the quote references. When my article links to a small press or literary journal the links pass PageRank. The more quality incoming links to those sites, the better they perform in the “eyes” of the Google search ranking algorithm; the link becomes more than logistic or navigational, it becomes an act of generosity (cultural and monetary) and the review an act of community that circulates the capital it accrues in publication and readership.





Geoffrey Nilson is a writer, editor, and the founder of poetry micro-press pagefiftyone. The author of four chapbooks, his writing has appeared recently in Coast Mountain Culture, Hamilton Review of Books, filling Station, and as part of Sweet Water: Poems for the Watersheds (Caitlin Press, 2020). Nilson is the BC-Yukon Regional Representative for the League of Canadian Poets and lives with his daughter in New Westminster on the unceded territory of the Qayqayt nation.

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