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list price: $16.95
edition:Paperback
category: Poetry
published: Aug 2020
ISBN:9781772012637
publisher: Talonbooks

Desire Path

by Taryn Hubbard

tagged: canadian, women authors, places
Description

A debut poetry collection that grows from the impulse to explore home in the suburb – in the intersections, overlaps, and gaps between urban and rural. These are walking poems and driving poems. In growing suburbs across the country, there is a push to urbanize, to rethink this sprawling space; urban renewal is foreshadowed all over contemporary suburbs, where vacant single-family lots herald anticipation of redevelopment into something more, something better, something healthier. But before that happens, what do we make of the space as it sits, just as it is? What monuments anchor the suburb now? These poems call on superblocks, gas stations, fast food joints, flickering flat screen TVs, six-lane highways, and wildfire smoke to guide the experience of moving through the complicated markers from childhood to motherhood.

About the Author
Taryn Hubbard's writing has appeared in journals and anthologies across Canada. Her first poetry collection, Desire Path, debuted with Talonbooks in 2020. Beautiful Unknown Futures is her second poetry collection. She lives in British Columbia with her family. Find out more at tarynhubbard.com.
Contributor Notes

Taryn Hubbard’s poetry, fiction, reviews, and interviews have been included in journals such as Canadian Literature, Room, The Capilano Review, Canadian Woman Studies, CV2, filling Station, and others. She holds a BA in English and Communications from Simon Fraser University, and a certificate in journalism from Langara College. She lives in B.C.’s Fraser Valley with her husband, Aaron, and daughter, Esther. Desire Path is her first book.

Editorial Review

"Desire Path is a tight collection that boldly asserts a place like Surrey is worth paying attention to, not in spite of, but because of its contradictions; its tension between past and future, rural and urban; its identity crisis; its complicated role in shaping a speaker from here to there, then to now, child to mother.”
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