With its razzle-dazzle wordplay and kaleidoscope of subjects, Sonnet L’Abbé’s second collection of poems is a tour-de-force. L’Abbé invents her own unique poetics, coupling a glittering variety of patterns with tumbling rhythms and rhymes. And with this refreshed language, she reconsiders all the rules for twenty-first-century life. The poems work like a whirlwind, ranging from the intimacy of infancy to the shock of whole civilizations razed by war, and are infused with a political undertone that reveals a child’s emerging understanding of identity, of specific citizenship, of bodies physical and psychological, of language, imagination, and dream. Whether funny or funky, candid or subtle, amused and ironic or stunned in fright, the poems are guided by a fierce intelligence that never oversimplifies the world. Killarnoe, the poet tells us, “is a place I invented right now. I just built it from my head.” And in its reconsideration of what it means to be, Killarnoe is fascinating, charged, and inspired.
As a poet, L'Abbé writes about national identity, race, gender and language. She has been shortlisted for the 2010 CBC Literary Award for poetry and has won the Bronwen Wallace Memorial Award for most promising writer under 35.
As a critic, she has been a regular reviewer of fiction and poetry for The Globe and Mail and has written scholarly articles on Canadian contemporary poetry. In, 2013 she was the Artist-In-Motion for 2017 Starts Now!, a series of talks that joined Canadians across the country in a conversation about how to celebrate the Canadian sesquicentennial.
Born in Toronto, Ontario, L'Abbé has a PhD in English Literature from the University of British Columbia, a Master's degree in English literature from the University of Guelph and a BFA in film and video from York University. She has been a script reader and has taught English at universities in South Korea and as well as teaching Creative Writing at the University of Toronto. She has also worked as an assistant poetry editor at Canadian Literature, and is an occasional contributor to CBC Radio One and the National Post. She currently teaches creative writing at UBC's Okanagan campus.
Simply brilliant. Almost every poem in this collection is an observation of and statement on sound.
Across the collection, L'Abbé creates a global narrative. Killarnoe's discrete sections alternate in examining inner and outer worlds: conscious, unconscious, political, natal, female, animal.
But even the gravest subjects are not safe from L'Abbé's charm; her humour and acute ear inform and stylize each poem. They are delightful, funny, informative.
Most rewarding is the last section, Amniotic, which builds up to the title poem, Killarnoe—itself a contemplation on linguistics, violence, contradiction, and resolution.