Caribou Run
eBook - ePub

Caribou Run

  1. 96 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
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Table of contents
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About This Book

At one moment, a pure abstraction; at the next, an incontrovertible presence of hooves, antlers, and fur. The beating heart of this assured début by Richard Kelly Kemick is the Porcupine caribou herd of the western Arctic.

In Caribou Run, Richard Kelly Kemick orchestrates a suite of poems both encyclopedic and lyrical, in which the caribou is both metaphor and phenomenon; both text and exegesis. He explores what we share with this creature of blood and bone and what is hidden, alien, and ineffable.

Following the caribou through their annual cycle of migration, Kemick experiments with formal and thematic variations that run from lyric studies of the creature and its environment, to found poems that play with the peculiar poetry of scientific discourse. to highly personal poems that find resonance in the caribou as a metaphor and a guiding spirit. Running the gamut from long-lined free verse and ghazal form to tightly controlled tankas and interwoven rhyme schemes, Caribou Run serves notice that a formidable new talent has been let loose on the terrain of Canadian poetry.

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Yes, you can access Caribou Run by Richard Kelly Kemick in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Literature & Canadian Poetry. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Year
2016
ISBN
9780864928221

Spring Migration

April 1 – May 31

There came a time when the Gwich’in and caribou became separated from each other, but they kept a part of each other’s hearts.
— Gwich’in Creation Story
The Caribou of North America, now considered to be the same species as the Reindeer of Europe and Asia, migrate over 250,000 km2 between their calving grounds on the coastal plains of Alaska, and their winter range in northern Yukon. This is the longest migration route of any land mammal on the planet.
The Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Animals
Best estimates put the Porcupine herd’s population at 90,000 to 100,000 animals, indicating a continued decline from 178,000 in 1989.
— “Porcupine Caribou Harvest Management Plan, 2010”
The tremendous drive that caribou feel to reach their traditional place of birth year after year suggests that these areas must have special attributes.
— George Calef, Caribou and the Barren-Lands
caribou

Introduction

Their odorous preorbital glands
are located medial
to the eye socket.
— “Caribou,” Wild Mammals of North America. Eds. George A. Feldhamer, Bruce C. Thompson, Joseph A. Chapman
Even in the scalpelled light
of a sickled moon,
they can find their way
back to the herd’s iris.
A fusion between calf and cow
dislocated by distance. But she,
openthroated and downwind, can see
the synchronized heartbeat once shared
as everything inside blooms out.
To breathe beside the young,
and inhale the double helix
of the fathers and the mothers
growing inside them; a family tree
blossoming in the blood,
pollen carried in the pulse.
The permafrost is a palimpsest
overwritten with ancestral movement,
scents like signatures scored into ice,
the calligraphy of the migration’s
sharp-hoofed curves.
Stretched beneath these winter nights,
arctic in their length, the smell
of seventy-five bodies trailing ribbons
of pine needle and wild rye,
splitting the blackness,
as the season’s first petals
will soon crack the frost.

‘Kar-ә-bōō, n.

The smallest of the human leg’s four tendons.
A brand of snow shovel union made in Waco, Texas.
An elderly female homosexual.
The last word of dialogue in The Da Vinci Code.
A punk band from Medicine Hat.
A speed bump in Saskatchewan.
The removal of a species from the endangered animals list for purely political reasons.
A brand of hat, once popular in Rhodesia.
The sugary resin at the bottom of a cup of coffee.
A miraculous result in a Nunavut provincial election.
A wet hand in a wool mitt.
The capital of Tarandus, Napoleon’s most northern province.
The Canadian code name...

Table of contents

  1. Spring Migration: April 1 – May 31
  2. Calving: June 1 – June 10
  3. Aggregation: June 11 – July 15
  4. Summer Scatter: July 16 – August 7
  5. Fall Migration: August 8 – September 22
  6. Notes
  7. Acknowledgements