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Available February 2002
ISBN 0-921870-96-5
6 X 9 116 pp
$14.95 pb
Poetry

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The Last
Trip to Oregon
Poems in Wake of Red's Death
By George Payerle
In these elegiac poems, George
Payerle registers the experience of life continuing after the death of
his closest friend, the BC poet and historian Charles "Red"
Lillard. The poems describe their last trip together to the dry
landscape of Central Oregon, circle to Alberta and then turn home to
the wetscape of the Shadow Weather Coast. Throughout are woven
meditations on music, particularly the Beethoven quartet Opus 131, in
which the triumph of the ordinary (mundane) becomes a portal to the
extraordinary (the divine). Memory becomes prayer, with the spirit of
person becoming present as the spirit of place.
"'Friends, lovers, books,
places, music – / always there it begins.' George Payerle’s
poems are unabashedly in love with things that matter, and disappear.
They’re like ad-lib cairns and graffiti, recording the glory he
glimpsed in this face, this creature, that moment. I’m moved by the
bittersweet pang of cherishing that resonates here: 'That
the gone be remembered / That there be surprise.'" –-
Dennis Lee
"A book of irreducible
perceptions, 'for every one of the many few' who bring to the page
what it takes to read it. It’s full of excellent things."
–- Robert Bringhurst
George Payerle, of Hungarian
extraction, is a novelist, poet, translator and editor. His two
published novels are the afterpeople (Anansi, 1970) and Unknown
Soldier (Macmillan, 1987). Short fictions, parts of novels and
poetry have appeared widely in periodicals over the past three decades
and on radio. In recent years, Payerle has returned to writing poetry,
some of which has appeared in magazine and chapbook form. The Last
Trip to Oregon is his first book of poems. A longtime resident of
Vancouver, Payerle now makes his home in Roberts Creek, B.C. |