Mortal Arguments by Sue Sinclair


Mortal Arguments
Title : Mortal Arguments
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 1894078292
ISBN-10 : 9781894078290
Language : English
Format Type : Paperback
Number of Pages : 96
Publication : First published October 1, 2003

Mortal Arguments is Sue Sinclair's second poetry collection. In it, she continues her extraordinary phenomenological investigation of lived experience, addressing with increasing urgency issues of profound philosophical and political importance such as consumerism, privilege, and our ability to respond to the suffering of others. Her voice combines great metaphorical brilliance with the depth one expects of a much older writer. Her poems will remind readers by turns of Rilke and urgent, sorrowing, ecstatic. This is an important book by one of Canada's finest young poets. Roses Not because it is sufficient, but because
we subsist on light, and what doesn't
cry out to be noticed? There's something here
you might recognize, but you're not sure; still, you're willing
to risk the loss of everything, seen and unseen,
the before and the after. It doesn't depend on you
but you move toward it. Because as long as there's a moment
here or there, why not arrange a few roses
in a jar, give thought to their listlessness, how they gather
the room about them yet think nothing of it, how each
thorn persists, how they have made a purpose
of holding still? Then you remember
the necessary and sufficient. This isn't it,
but you don't know where else to begin.


Mortal Arguments Reviews


  • Gilbert Wesley Purdy

    "The publishers of Sue Sinclair refer to the poetry of Mortal Arguments as Rilkean. While it is a dangerous comparison — suggesting the kind of hyperbole which belies the general condition of small press publishing — what is shocking here is the fact that it is not wholly inappropriate. There is something here and there in these poems which suggests not only Rilke but the best of Rilke."

    To read a reprint of my complete review click here>>>
    at the Brick Books site.

  • Angela

    Loved these lines from "Prairie" (pg 65):

    Checking the world
    like a mailbox, waiting for a message.
    Watching through the screen door, a pixelated
    landscape of expectation.