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Blackbird Song

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Drawing deeply from his Cree ancestors and equally from European and Asian traditions, Randy Lundy offers an exquisite series of meditations on memory, evanescence, and the land. This is the mind of prayer, a seeing and re-seeing of the immense cyclic beauty of the earth.

“What meditative power there is in Blackbird Song, what pure acts of attention and remembrance.”—Don McKay, author of Strike/Slip

“Lundy’s poems carry the immediacy and radiance and intelligence of the lived world itself.”—Jane Hirshfield, author of The Beauty

“More than poems, these are offerings and songs.”—Linda Hogan, author of Dark. Sweet.

“Read, yes, we must, Randy Lundy’s Blackbird Song. It calls to us.”—Simon J. Ortiz, author of from Sand Creek

“This is the book of poems I’ve been waiting for.”—Lorna Crozier, author of What the Soul Doesn’t Want

88 pages, Paperback

Published January 1, 2018

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Randy Lundy

8 books6 followers

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5 stars
32 (59%)
4 stars
13 (24%)
3 stars
7 (12%)
2 stars
2 (3%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews
Profile Image for Sue.
1,447 reviews656 followers
August 7, 2019
Randy Lundy, a member of the Barren Lands (Cree) First Nation, has lived most of his life in Saskatchewan, Canada which is reflected in his writing. His poetry and prose poetry, both included in this volume, are close to the earth, to nature, to his family, to pets and wild animals. Birds carry his messages as they seem to bring seasonal change. The rhythms of his tribal life and historical past are also present in poetic rhythms.

There are three sections in the book. The first is poetry; the second is prose poetry while the third returns to poetry. It is the second section where Lundy reflects most sharply back on his own history, family, personal experience. This section is more overtly biographical, continuing with the same nature-based imagery but now focusing on self, family, memory and its gaps and leaps between generations, native life. In the other sections, the personal glimpses are quicker, more sliding, wrapped in with evocative views of the natural world.

the final poem Another Season

Buds on the mountain ash this spring, a green paler than
you have ever seen .
Sunlight, blackbird singing. What more could you ask, friend?
Pilgrim, what more ?

This is an excellent collection, which I took my time to savor. Recommended to all who enjoy poetry.

A copy of this book was provided by the publisher through NetGalley in return for an honest review.
Profile Image for Katrina.
347 reviews27 followers
September 17, 2018
Can’t believe Randy Lundy has passed me by until now.

Blackbird Song is epic that deserves multiple readings over time to appreciate its full impact. Lundy invokes powerful imagery throughout this work and covers a range of emotions; loss, love, belonging, loneliness, all throughout the changing seasons, so much so, it’s hard not to stop and get completely lost in the odd verse every so often.

I think I what I loved most about this collection was how central a role the natural world, in all of its guises, plays throughout the work. It’s vibrant and complements Lundy’s reflections on emotion and memory perfectly.

Will probably go out and get a physical copy on the back of this.

This was free a review copy from NetGalley and University of Regina Press in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Jim Puskas.
Author 2 books146 followers
August 19, 2019
There's a palpable atmosphere surrounding these poems, a sense of harmony with the way of the natural world; an acute awareness of the rhythms of life. And Lundy celebrates an intense relationship with his forebears and most notably his grandmother, who ...
kept a wire coiled notebook
recording in neat columns
the temperatures, daytime high and low,
and sky conditions —
as if knowing could change what had been
or predict what was to come.

He looks to nature for insight into the human condition:
Memory is an uncomfortable skin.
Your mind like a sapling bent,
curved like the earth.
Curved like a question mark.

Time and again, he reaches for images in the natural world to explore and understand his own emotional life:
He knows when she awakes
she will come down to him.
Her eyes will reach for him in a way
that makes him think of a butterfly on a rock.
How it flexes its wings, each tip leaving
a vestige of pollen
like dust on sun-warmed stone.

A thoroughly enjoyable selection of short lyrical poems; this is a poet I look forward to visiting often.
Profile Image for Joseph Spuckler.
1,528 reviews33 followers
October 8, 2020
Blackbird Song by Randy Lundy is the poet's third collection of poetry. Lundy is a member of the Barren Lands (Cree) First Nation. He has published two previous collections of poetry, Under the Night Sun and Gift of the Hawk. His work has been widely anthologized.

Lundy's poetry does something very unique. He is able to capture the Native American experience and culture and insert it into Western poetry without compromising either tradition or form. He recreatess a familiar past and common memories with the reader.

Remember the butter glazed, golden
crust of bread fresh from the oven
Remember the oven door
creaking, heat blasting
your six year old face

The first section of poetry is in a traditional style and frequently include a crow on the fringes of the poetry. The second section is prose poetry with a connection to the earth and the seasons. The collection closes with more traditional poetry. An outstanding collection of North American poetry.


Profile Image for Lindsay.
Author 3 books9 followers
January 26, 2022
Words flow freely in beautiful poetic lyricism…

How did the book make me feel/think?

Our experiences are not the same.

I can’t force mine on you. You can’t force yours on me.

But we do, not you. Us.

Words flow freely in beautiful poetic lyricism, unleashing a flow of pain and suffering created by forcing WANT and WAY upon you, stripping away the beauty of innocence and purity from you.

I feel pain. Yours.

Speak up. You do.

Can we hear you?

Resist assimilation. You must.

We destroy culture, turning WANT into desperation.

A better, more in-tune life, erased, Noise takes away clarity.

We tell you; you can have more—it will never be allowed. We lie.

Look where it has gotten us. Today.

And even in our shame, we still dare to judge—to take away your purity, your innocence—creating unbearable pain.

Sorry.

It can never be enough.

That’s how the book made me feel.

WRITTEN: January 26, 2022
Profile Image for Michelle Kidwell.
Author 36 books85 followers
October 8, 2018


Blackbird Song
by Randy Lundy

University of Regina Press

Multicultural Interest , Poetry
Pub Date 16 Jun 2018


I am reviewing a copy of Blackbird Song through University of Regina Press and Netgalley:


In this book Randy Lundy draws deeply from his Cree Heritage along with European and Asian traditions to create the beautifully written poems in this book. The poems here can you remind you of such poets as Simon Ortiz, Par Lagerkvist and Jane Hirshfield.


If you're looking for a book that takes you to that place of beauty, and of peace. It allows us a glimpse into a heritage that embraces the beautiful creations.

I give Blackbird Song five out of five stars!


Happy Reading!
Profile Image for Magdalena.
24 reviews1 follower
July 21, 2020
This collection deserves five stars; it's the first book, poetry or prose, which has made me want to go back and annotate/ sticky-note to mark my favourite places. Some of the poems are among my favourites of all time (especially 'Solace' and 'The Long Walk').
Profile Image for Penn Kemp.
Author 19 books49 followers
April 11, 2021
“You find yourself feeling the land has, for the first time, looked at you, / And sized you up.”

Randy Lundy, “Black Bear”
Blackbird Song
Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews

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