GRIFFIN POETRY PRIZE 2005Canadian Winner Book: Short Journey Upriver Towards Oishida Poet: Roo Borson Publisher: McClelland and Stewart Ltd. Click the book cover or title to purchase Short Journey Upriver Towards Oishida online. Click here to read and listen to an excerpt. Biography  Born in California in 1952, Roo Borson has made her home in Canada since graduating with a Master of Fine Arts Degree from the University of British Columbia in 1977. Short Journey Upriver Toward Oishida, also winner of the Governor Generals and Pat Lowther Memorial Awards and shortlisted for the Trillium Book Prize, is her tenth book of poems, which include Water memory (1996) and Night Walk: Selected Poems (1994), a finalist for the Governor Generals Award. In addition to her prize winning essays, Borsons poetry has won many awards including the CBC Prize for Poetry in 1982 and 1989, and has been a finalist for the National Magazine Awards in 1990 and 1993, the Governor Generals Award in 1984 as well as 1994, and in collaboration with Kim Maltman and Andy Patton as PAIN NOT BREAD, won the Long Poem Prize in the Malahat Review in 1993. Among her publications are: In the Smokey Light of the Fields (1980), Intent, Or, the Weight of the World (1989), Landfall (1977), Rain (1980), A Sad Device (1981), The Transparence of November; Snow (1985) and The Whole Night Coming Home (1984). Borson has given readings across Canada, in the United States and in Australia, and has been published in a wide array of anthologies including The New Oxford Book of Canadian Verse, the Norton Introduction to Poetry, the Norton Introduction to Literature and The Morningside Papers. She has served as the writer in residence at both Concordia and the University of Western Ontario. Currently living in Toronto with poet and physicist Kim Maltman, along with Andy Patton and Maltman, Borson is a member of the Collaborative performance poetry ensemble PAIN NOT BREAD. As part of the recent Griffin Trust appearances at the Dublin Writers Festival, Roo Borson kept a blog of her observations and impressions you can read it here. Judges Citation To lose North, in some idioms, is to lose all direction. In her journey, Borson finds North. This is the work of a poet writing at the height of her powers. It is a poetic journal of mortality, of the why be born? and do you still love poetry?, of entering middle age, and of journeying through landscape, seasons, plants, pasts, to find it again. The book is a small perfection in its construction, moving deftly through seasons and forms: poetic prose for a garden of persimmons, haiku rising out of prose sequences for the autumn record, and the books fulcrum, the Water Colour poems, not haiku but poems that bear haikus arrested feeling and succinct observation. As for Basho, Borsons mentor and poetic ancestor, setting off toward North lost, loss, losing is to find the journey itself and ones own corporeality, out of grief and into the light of words. from Summer Grass | The willows are thinking again about thickness, slowness, lizard skin on hot rock, and day by day this imaging transforms them into what we see: dragons in leaf, draped scales alongside the river of harried, spring-stirred silt. The magpie recites Scriabin in early morning as a mating song, and home is just a place you started out, the only place you still know how to think from, so that that place is mated to this by necessity as well as choice, though now you have to start again from here, and it isnt home. Venus rising in the early evening beside the Travelodge, as wayward and causal as will, or beauty, or as once we willed beauty to be though this was in retrospect, and only practice for some other life. Do you still love poetry? Below the willows, in the dry winter reeds, banjo frogs begin a disconcerting raga, one note each, the rustling blades grow green and it tires, the lichen-spotted tin canteen suspended in the river weeds like a turtle up for air: such a curious tiredness deflected there. And what would you give up, in the beautiful false logic of math, or Greek? In the sum of the possible, long ago in the summer grass
Here beside the river I close my eyes: there the little girls lean continuously across a rusted sign that says Dont Feed the Swans and feed the swans. The swans are reasoning beings; the young cygnets, hatched from pins and old mattress stuffing, bright-eyed, learning what has bread, and what doesnt. What doesnt have to do with this is all the rest: one more chance to blow out the candles and wish for things we wished for that wouldnt happen unless we closed our eyes. Not the gingko or the level gaze, or the speaking voice beneath the pillow, or the waking in the morning with a name. But cloud or grief, when grief is loneliness and you close your eyes. Speech, when speech is loneliness, and you close your eyes. From Short Journey Upriver Toward Oishida, by Roo Borson Copyright © 2004 by Roo Borson | Listen to Roo Borson read from Summer Grass 
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