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Bentleys
Dennis Cooley
€ 25.99
€ 20.45
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Description for Bentleys
Paperback. Cooley, with his deft, playful command of language, and his typographic exuberance, demonstrates his mastery of the long prairie poem. Series: Currents. Num Pages: 160 pages. BIC Classification: DCF. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 228 x 155 x 12. Weight in Grams: 262.
In the bentleys, Dennis Cooley, with his trademark energy and verve, has recreated the tensions and themes of Sinclair Ross's classic prairie novel As for Me and My House. Celebrating 'love in a dry land,' Cooley, with his deft, playful command of language, and his typographic exuberance, demonstrates his mastery of the long prairie poem. Containing some of the finest writing of his career, the bentleys will take its place with Bloody Jack as a 'beJesus delight.'
In the bentleys, Dennis Cooley, with his trademark energy and verve, has recreated the tensions and themes of Sinclair Ross's classic prairie novel As for Me and My House. Celebrating 'love in a dry land,' Cooley, with his deft, playful command of language, and his typographic exuberance, demonstrates his mastery of the long prairie poem. Containing some of the finest writing of his career, the bentleys will take its place with Bloody Jack as a 'beJesus delight.'
Product Details
Format
Paperback
Publication date
2006
Publisher
University of Alberta Press Canada
Number of pages
150
Condition
New
Series
Currents
Number of Pages
160
Place of Publication
, Canada
ISBN
9780888644701
SKU
V9780888644701
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 5 to 9 working days
Ref
99-2
About Dennis Cooley
dennis cooley was born in Estevan, Saskatchewan. He later moved to Manitoba, where he helped to start the Manitoba Writers' Guild and was a founding member of Turnstone Press. He taught Canadian literature, poetry, creative writing, and literary theory at the University of Manitoba. He has published widely, including well over a dozen volumes of poetry, notably Bloody Jack (2002), and the bentleys (2006). A recipient of the Manitoba Writers' Guild Lifetime Achievement Award, dennis cooley lives in Winnipeg.
Reviews for Bentleys
"This is deft poetry, with much use of figurative language." Anne Burke, January 2007 "In this long Prairie poem, Cooley has recreated , and added to, the tensions and themes of Sinclair Ross's classic Prairie novel, As for Me and My House. Forms range from movie playbills to spelling bees to country and western songs, providing both fun and reflection." Prairie Books NOW, Spring 2007 "Where students, critics, and general readers have long pondered the identity of the unnamed Mrs. Bentley, Cooley imagines a play with parts for each of the characters in the novel...But, of course, Cooley is having his fun, playing out various scenarios in a novel that is cold and dense with silences...Oh, consider the possibilities? Dennis Cooley's considered quite a few of them and fleshes out some sad, some silly, and some beautiful ones here in the bentleys." Bill Robertson, The StarPhoenix, May 12, 2007 "Cooley seems at first to peer into Ross's world from the outside...In the end, Cooley's approach to Ross's book is not timid at all...He makes himself perfectly at home with his characters, addressing Mrs. Bentley as 'mrs. b.' He makes Ross's world his own, too, splashing the landscape with pigments of red and black: "every evening the sun rips / open the edge of horizon / torn open by sharks some say.' Between the sharks and the 'big-shouldered' crows in their 'black-leather jackets,' this prairie is a dangerous place. the bentleys tells the story of an affair in this tough setting, with its 'unsupportive cast.' Cooley captures the language of passion with a jagged musicality that recalls, for me, Ondaatje's Coming Through Slaughter." Harry Vandervlist, Alberta Views, June 2007. "In the bentleys (2005), Dennis Cooley has taken Ross' modernist novel and presented a post-modern version, unmaking the story and reworking the novel's linguistic possibilities. The pleasure of this text is certainly in its exuberant verbal energy and play. the bentleys is a collage of literary parodies in a range of genres...Ross's Bentleys are indeed emotionally present in Cooley's text...But Cooley's Bentleys are also contemporary to our time-comic, profane, physically abundant...Cooley and Crozier both depend on our knowledge of Ross' novel for their poems to work, but this relation in no way diminishes their poetry; rather it gives their work cultural weight, and at the same time extends and honours As for Me and My House, the Ur-text of Canadian prairie writing." David Stouck, Canadian Literature 194, Autumn 2007 "The emotion that Cooley is good at is yearning, and that is true to Ross's novel. Yearning
to escape, to give birth, to be loved, to be noticed, to paint
saturates As For Me and My House and yearning also has an insistent presence in the bentleys. I left Cooley's book, strangely enough, feeling that I knew less about Mr. and Mrs. Bentley, which was both disturbing and oddly satisfying." Sue Sorensen, Canadian Mennonite University, Prairie Fire Review of Books, January 2008
to escape, to give birth, to be loved, to be noticed, to paint
saturates As For Me and My House and yearning also has an insistent presence in the bentleys. I left Cooley's book, strangely enough, feeling that I knew less about Mr. and Mrs. Bentley, which was both disturbing and oddly satisfying." Sue Sorensen, Canadian Mennonite University, Prairie Fire Review of Books, January 2008