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Meeting the Tormentors in Safeway
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Table of Contents

The Promise We Made to the Earthquake Chinese Food with Gavra, Aged Three Ottawa Walk-in Clinic Waiting Room, 9 p.m Preschool Party Music Rimsky Korsakov on Fifth Avenue The Village Arsonist The Widows A Child's Christmas in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Curriculum Vitae Sexual History The Classics Lesson The Test Cape Template for a Conversation with a Single Friend One of These Days Voted Best Place to Live Meeting the Tormentors in Safeway Doug Hill The Girls and the Eels The Gulls Using the Public Binoculars at Sherbet Lake Discovery Centre Escaping the Ice Mrs. Miller Lays It Out to Her Daughter at the Audition, March 23, 1985 Fixing the Old Folks' Home How Are You, Bunny? Taking Care What You Want the Doctor to Tell You Over a Faberge Owl The Toy Catalogue of the Afterlife The Ghosts of the Space Dogs The Released Ones Lost Twins Bad Influence and Senior Kindergarten The GO Train Arithmetic Song Modern Camera Explaining Filial Piety to My Brother in the Bar A Serbian Man in a Bar Said If I Knew The Enigma of Fate Eulogy for Ken Spada Final Request The Hand of Scheveningen

Promotional Information

Co-op available
Galleys available at BEA
Possible blurbs from Charles Martin, Kim Bridgford, Richard Wilbur (whom she's met), A.E. Stallings, Franz Wright, Yevgeny Yevtushenko, Michael Lista, Lynne Crosbie, and (believe it or not), Wes Anderson. We have contact info for/she knows/has met/has read with or other connections to all.
Is connected to: the West Chester Poetry Conference (Kim Bridgford, Philadelphia); Taylor Mali in NYC (organizer of the Urbana Slam & the Page Meets Stage Series); Bob Holman, NYC, owner of the Bowery Poetry Club; Jeffrey McDaniel, NYC poet, connected to Sarah Lawrence; Anna M. Evans/Quincy Lehr of the Carmine St. Metrics reading series/The Raintown Review; in LA to Timothy Steele, Leslie Monsour, and Julie Kane (poet laureate of LA); in Seattle, Lana Hechtman Ayers, who would organize a reading, Daemond Arrindel, organizer of the Seattle Slam, Elizabeth Austen (NPR), Jeremy Richards (also radio), and visual artist Hanita Schwartz. Again, we have contact information for all of them.
National radio campaign (targeting NPR/The Writers Almanac/Tell Me More, plus anyone AO's ever spoken with on-air)
National print campaign targeting Poetry, Verse Daily, The New Criterion, Poets & Writers, Poetry Show, Parnassus, Slate, NPR.org/David Orr; again will make shameless use of AO's connections
Possible promotional videos through her film connections
Print campaign will also target poetry bloggers/reviewers
Promotion through www.alexandraoliver.ca
Social media campaign with focus on poetry performance videos/YouTube
Goodreads giveaways
Promotional broadsides

About the Author

Alexandra Oliver holds an M.A. in Drama/Cinema Studies from the University of Toronto and an M.F.A. in Creative Writing from Stonecoast. Since emerging onto the Vancouver poetry scene in 1992 and being named the following year as one of the Top Ten Young Artists of the year by The Vancouver Sun, she has gone on to receive two Pushcart Prize nominations, as well as a CBC Literary Award nomination. She has performed her work at places as diverse as Lollapalooza, The National Poetry Slam, the CBC Radio National Poetry Face-Off, the Bowery Poetry Club in New York, the Spectacular Obsessions Fellini Retrospective at the Bell TIFF Lightbox and the Italian Contemporary Film Festival in Toronto. Her work has appeared in numerous journals and publications worldwide, including Orbis Rhyme International, Nexus, The Atlanta Review, The New Guard, Light Quarterly, Future Cycle Poetry, The Raintown Review, and The Vancouver Sun, as well as About.Com's Poems After The Attack anthology, a collection discussing and reflecting upon the aftermath of 9/11. Her first book, Where the English Housewife Shines (Tin Press, London, UK) was released in April, 2007.She is also co-editing (with Annie Finch) an anthology of metrical poetry. Oliver has taught poetry and led workshops in high schools, colleges, libraries, cultural organizations and prisons, and was one of the Directors of the Edgewise Electrolit Centre, an organization created to promote Canadian poetry and new poets through the use of new media. Her interests include form, ekphrasis, translation, performance, and creating poetry syllabi for ESL speakers, seniors, victims of violence, and at-risk youth. Alexandra divides her time between Toronto, Canada, and Glasgow, Scotland, where she teaches poetry through the Govan and Craigton Integration Network and acts as a Staff Writer for the Glasgow Film Theatre.

Reviews

"An incredible feat of vision and voice ... technically, nothing is out of Oliver's grasp. Her go-to iambic pentameter can swallow anything in its path. Meeting the Tormentors in Safeway should go a long way toward establishing Oliver as one of the country's best stanza makers, with a fluidity and ambition aspiring to Dylan Thomas or Yeats ... When she succeeds, she succeeds entirely."--Michael Lista, "On Poetry" "Theatrical, funny, formally ingenious, Alexandra Oliver's poems revel in their extravagance. A slam poet turned formalist, Oliver takes a cue from Larkin's "Pleasure Principle," her poems little machines precision-crafted for the reader's pleasure."--National Post "Oliver writes as though wit were her middle name ... she is an assassin clever and precise as a clock."--Michael Dennis "Alexandra Oliver has many arrows in her quiver--all of them sharpened to a fine point. In satirical work like "The Classics Lesson," she is mordantly funny. Yet she can also treat her subjects quietly and with touching understatement, as in "Chinese Food with Gavra, Aged Three." Ms. Oliver is, moreover, technically resourceful in the best sense. For example, in "Doug Hill" the verbal repetitions of the pantoum form perfectly suit the obsessive voice of the romantically disappointed protagonist. This is an excellent and entertaining collection."--Timothy Steele "It is sometimes argued that our disjunctive times need to be mirrored by disjunctive forms: only aesthetic disorder can respond to our experience. Such a simplicity is disproven by Alexandra Oliver's Meeting the Tormentors in Safeway, in which disjunctions of many kinds (such as the one in her title) are brought to order by the poet's refining passion and corrosive wit. Here are brilliantly contemporary poems in traditional forms, the work of a stunning new voice."--Charles Martin "Alexandra Oliver is in full command of a saber wit and impeccable ear. With these she tackles nothing less than the unsettling hazards, absurd encounters, and oddball ironies of our modern predicament to make poems that bite and entertain. That they are also by turns tender, sad, and rueful speaks not only to her range but to the underlying intensity of feeling. For Oliver's considerable formal skills are always employed to prod and direct poetry's energies to keep pace with the contemporary world. Lucky the reader along for the ride."--Jeanne Marie Beaumont, author of The Burning of Three Fires and Curious Conduct

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