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Poetry Canadian

The Art of Floating

by (author) Melanie Marttila

Publisher
Latitude 46 Publishing
Initial publish date
Apr 2024
Category
Canadian, Nature
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9781988989747
    Publish Date
    Apr 2024
    List Price
    $22.95

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Description

Melanie Marttila captures the solace and healing she has found in the terrestrial landscapes, flora, and fauna of northeastern and southwestern Ontario while balancing the ebbs and flows of her mental health. There is similar reprieve in looking skyward as she shares in beautifully crafted poems the reflections of celestial patterns on moods, perceptions and relationships. Through the often insignificant and mildly miniscule moments in life, Marttila demonstrates the truth and hope that lie within each, whether connecting with land or sky. The Art of Floating is dedicated to the poet's father, who taught her how to surrender to and survive the rough waters of mental illness.

About the author

Melanie Marttila has been writing since the age of seven, when she made her first submission to CBC's "Pencil Box." She is a graduate of the University of Windsor's masters program in English Literature and Creative Writing and her poetry has appeared in Polar Borealis, Polar Starlight, and Sulphur. Her short fiction has appeared in Pulp Literature, On Spec, Pirating Pups, and Home for the Howlidays. She lives and writes in Sudbury, Ontario, in the house where three generations of her family have lived, on the street that bears her surname, with her spouse and their dog, Torvi..

Melanie Marttila's profile page

Editorial Reviews

The Art of Floating is an elegant and beautifully crafted debut collection of poetry by Sudbury’s Melanie Marttila. Her poems are mirrors to the tiny, often quiet, and supposedly insignificant moments in a life. In her poetic work, Marttila reminds her readers to take note of the rhythms of the natural world, inviting them to consider elements of myth, astronomy, ritual, and personal anecdote as a way of finding the poems that live in the world in both a specific and universal way. Paying attention to the supposedly small things in life, Marttila suggests, is the way in which you can enter the world—and move through it mindfully—in a truly poetic fashion.— Kim Fahner, author of Emptying the OceanMelanie Marttila practices a verbal form of “floating” in her poetry: a carefully poised meditative quietness of words, free of divisive polarities. She floats into both the cosmically vast and the allegedly small – vibrations of the Earth and conversations between leaves – sung together in an unbroken continuity or even unity. In tributes to animals, she balances their intelligence with ours, so we are conscious in a togetherness, not opposition. A suite of poems to the moon, written from a year’s lunar observations, floats self and moon together in a unity all their own. Marttila speaks to a wholeness in things in which we all are rooted.— Roger Nash, author of 22 books, his latest poetry collection is World of DifferenceIn The Art of Floating, we are invited to soften to two interesting sensations at once: to float face-up on a fresh lake that fills our ears with its water, and to let the “lilting formations” of poetic sound pour into our listening. Over the five sections of this wonderful debut collection there is a wide ecology of sound-sparkling presences—“congregated” starlings and “their riotous dirge,” how “ravens caw, sacred/unexpected” while, indoors, “cat’s purr is a/white noise machine.” Marttila is a keen observer of the bustling natural activity of seasonal cycles that surround her, filling our senses with “the fullness of a scalloped moon” to a “scantily-clad tamarack” to playing the coldness of March lake ice off the San Andreas fault’s searing magma.— Margaret Christakos author of 11 poetry collections including Dear Birch