Vetiver
AUTHOR: Joël
Des Rosiers
TRANSLATOR: Hugh Hazelton
ISBN: 1897109040
136 PAGES
$14.95 CDN
$12.95
US
WINNER
GOVERNOR GENERAL'S AWARD FOR TRANSLATION
WINNER
GRAND PRIX DU LIVRE DE MONTREAL
WINNER
GRAND PRIX DU FESTIVAL INTERNATIONAL DE LA POESIE DE TROIS RIVIERES
ABOUT THE BOOK:
Joël Des Rosiers
is an acclaimed Haitian-born francophone writer whose work has been nominated
for the Governor General's Award and whose life reads like a novel
he is a psychiatrist, an award-winning poet and a political activist on
the international stage. His poetry collection Vetiver, which won
the 1999 Grand Prix du livre de Montréal and the 2000 Grand Prix
du Festival international de la poésie de Trois Rivières,
is now published for the first time in English.
Vetiver, a grass also known as cuscus, was brought from the Indies to
Haiti. There it has taken root and flourished, becoming all-pervasive.
The heavy aroma of the grass permeates everything. In Vetiver,
the grass is a powerful, mythical symbol for Joël Des Rosiers, representing
the root of lyrical possibility.
An homage to his native land, Des Rosiers' narrative poem evokes all of
the wild opulence of the Caribbean world and plumbs the depths of memory
in language that is rich and multihued, full of tangible flavours. It
is a hymn to the power of the word, the book and the voice, guided by
the heritage of ancestors and the sensual proximity of people and things.
Des Rosiers revisits themes from his three previous collections here:
nostalgia, the search for roots and identity, the pain of memory, and
the exploration of real and imagined spaces. Rooted in mystery and sacrifice,
these narrative poems are shaped by extreme tensions that blend, in a
strange way, with a seemingly clinical erudition where the melancholy
of the flesh offers itself up as a substitution for mourning, religious
ceremony and sensuality.
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