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Harbour Grids by Zane Koss
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Harbour Grids

$10.49

Narrator Zane Koss

This audiobook uses AI narration.

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Length 20 minutes
Language English
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Summary

Harbour Grids is a long poem in four parts that investigates ideas of community and belonging. Beginning as a meditation on the surface of New York Harbor, the poem radiates outward through issues of labour, location, history, belonging, and subjectivity. How do we experience our complex relations to the world we live in? Harbour Grids seeks to answer this question by combining the sonic texture and investigative poetics of Daphne Marlatt, the improvisatory spirit and ethical engagement of Fred Wah, the experimental attention to the structures of language of Nasser Hussain, and the dazzling sense of visual space of Jordan Abel.


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Reviews

โ€œA meditation both visual and lyric, pointillist and staccato, accumulative and stretched out as a singular line between regular points.โ€โ€”rob mclennan

โ€œIn Harbour Grids, lines of shimmering โ€˜sโ€™ phonemes ripple across fragmentary layers of New Yorkโ€™s urban development from harbour to immigrant neighbourhood. Zane Koss has created a stutter-statement most singular in its embrace of word and silence, visual image and social critique. To read Harbour Grids is to experience this moving interplay between surface and depth.โ€โ€”Daphne Marlatt, author of Intertidal and Steveston

โ€œThe grid is one of modernityโ€™s core forms and conceptsโ€”the fabricated space fashioned for plotting its measured trajectories. In Harbour Grids, Zane Kossโ€™s moving minimalist intervention, the grid is both constraint and focalizer. Through the shimmering veil of infrastructure, nation, and language, โ€œscattered / across the / shifting surfaceโ€ of the page, we gather glimpses of the natural world, welcome those who have navigated the borderโ€™s rigid nets, and hear languages other than a monolithic English. The result is a near perfect balancing of form and formlessnessโ€”of urban enclosure, and a willful swerve onto the open common.โ€โ€”Stephen Collis, author of A History of the Theories of Rain and Decomp

โ€œThe grid referred to in the title of Zane Kossโ€™s exquisite Harbour Grids is a pattern of visual and sonic ripplesโ€”the hiss and shimmer of a living and lived world. The grids are represented by parallel rows of the letter S, regularly placed with open space between them. At diverse Sโ€™s, observed details surface, fleeting (they are gone from the next page, the next moment), but lasting long enough to disturb the pattern and excite the mind. There is nothing in Harbour Grids thatโ€™s inert. And with each perceived glint, each registered sound, a harbourscape unfolds: wavelets, tidal lift and fall, boats and ships, streets and shops, vehicles, pedestrians. And human social life burbles on, speaking its different languages. Thereโ€™s no reigning subjective presence hereโ€”no singular โ€œI.โ€ Subjectivities are part of the distributed stuff of the world. But Harbour Grids is nonetheless a powerfully affective book, suffused with melancholy and some kind of accompanying pervasive wisdom. Itโ€™s a beautiful book.โ€โ€”Lyn Hejinian, author of My Life and The Language of Inquiry

โ€œFrom its opening page onward, Zane Kossโ€™s Harbour Grids takes us into a floating world of letters and words arranged on the aqueous white surface of the rectangular page. Words enter this world as if by accident, washed up among the sounds and shapes of the letter โ€œsโ€ repeating again and again in four-line square grids on the white page, detailing what Koss calls his โ€œphenomenological investigation of the surface of New York harborโ€ perceived in fragments. โ€œsโ€ as the shape and sound of waves moving across water, punctuating the words and phrases that appear as if out of the fog or night or from โ€œbehind freightersโ€ or even โ€œa cosmos of paths โ€ฆ submergedโ€; โ€œsโ€ as breath, the readerโ€™s and listenerโ€™s breathing, โ€œone shimmering planeโ€ฆ among othersโ€ฆ in the eyesโ€ฆ a shard of lightโ€ radiating out across the lines of the poem and the space of the place itself.โ€โ€”Stephen Ratcliffe, author of sound of wave in channel and Selected Days

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