GRIFFIN POETRY PRIZE 2006Canadian Shortlist Book: An Oak Hunch Poet: Phil Hall Publisher: Brick Books Click the book cover or title to purchase An Oak Hunch online. Click here to read and listen to an excerpt. Biography  Phil Hall was born in 1953 and raised on farms in the Kawarthas region of Ontario. His newest book of poems is An Oak Hunch, the title of which comes from one of the sequences in this five-sequence selection and is the authors homage to a poetic mentor, Al Purdy. Halls first book, Eighteen Poems, was published in Mexico City in 1973. Since then he has published eight other books of poems, three chapbooks, and a cassette of labour songs. His books of poetry include Why I Havent Written (1985), The Unsaid (1992), and Trouble Sleeping (2000). Hall has taught writing and literature at York University, Ryerson University, the Kootenay School of Writing and a number of colleges. He has been a poet in residence at the University of Western Ontario, the Kingston Writers Workshop, The Sage Hill Writing Experience in Saskatchewan, and elsewhere. Since 1976 he has been a small publisher of broadsides and chapbooks under his Flat Singles Press imprint. In 2001, his book Trouble Sleeping was nominated for the Governor Generals Literary Award for Poetry. Hall holds an M.A. in creative writing from The University of Windsor. He has been the literary editor of This Magazine and is editor and publisher of Flat Singles Press. He teaches poetry at George Brown College and English at Seneca College, both in Toronto. Judges Citation These are poems of ferocity and humility, of vulnerability and wit, poems whose skilled complexities elucidate the lyric disturbance of melody, memory and self. Grasping his intimate line like a kind of loved and fortuitous handtool, what Hall constructs is a voice that attends to the familial and psychic histories submerged in landscape, in all their bitterness and gorgeousness. There is a rough amplitude in his compositional principle: that between the body & language/ a ravine of call and response. In this work, out of the uncertainty and lag of dailiness comes the knowledge that although precision isnt always simple, by the precise ear we may arrive at the heart. SAVING A LOST PATH BACK | each evacuated tread cancelling a labeled dig each bounding hoof-track deep as a nostril a path contorting like a storm rudder or a knob on a dash - ingrown by scrub-hawthorn deak - waree-ree-ree - tchee - tchee bobolinks fluffing in quillwork shadow haw-hips detonating clay red in cold bills guernicas of scythed footage boiling in the soup of the day - jacklit by vagrant strobes deflective-ornery path back still - I'm going THE BIG JACK I CAUGHT IN THE STONEPILE & put in the cellar to tame ran in blurred circles 'til the farmhouse spun when I caught him again to let him go his hindlegs jumping in my fist like the tractor's gear knob he tore a long furrow up the belly of my arm as if I'd been trying to kill myself the house slowly stopped spinning & fell on its side - the cellar an open grave its soft potatoes handled by cloud-shadow boy was my arm ever starting to sing From An Oak Hunch, by Phil Hall Copyright © Phil Hall, 2005 | Listen to Phil Hall read SAVING A LOST PATH BACK and THE BIG JACK I CAUGHT IN THE STONEPILE 
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