![]() Photo by Susan Gillis |
John
Steffler was born in Toronto November 13, 1947, and grew up in a rural
area near Thornhill, Ontario. John was educated at the University of Toronto
and the University of Guelph. Since 1975 he has lived in Corner Brook, Newfoundland
and Labrador where he taught at Sir Wilfred Grenfell College (a campus of
Memorial University of Newfoundland). Steffler currently resides in Montreal,
teaching at Concordia University. John was a recent Parliamentary Poet Laureate of Canada. (2006-2008) |
|
Excerpt from Letter
of Nomination for John Steffler as Poet Laureate: Books
by John Steffler
Poetry Novels Children's Books |
|
![]() |
Lookout is John's most recent book, scheduled for release March 16, 2010 and is the first collection of new poems in more than a decade from one of Canada's most respected poets and the recent Poet Laureate of Canada. The wide-ranging poems in Lookout - John Steffler's first book of new poems since his award-winning That Night We Were Ravenous (1998) - celebrate the landscape and history of western Newfoundland, which is inseparable from an exploration of the poet's own life. The poems embrace the limestone barrens on Newfoundland's Great Northern |
|
Peninsula and the
poet's personal life, the end of a marriage, the beginnings of new love.
There is also a series of poems about his parents' struggle to deal with
his mother's Alzheimer's during the last year of her life "Steffler paints the wilderness in a language that often 'knocks and hisses and crackles,' but nothing of the poetry here sounds contrived or artificial. [Steffler's work] subtly nudges the reader along, never falling prey to the usual grab-bag of bells and whistles. It is a work that teems with images that are celebratory of life, ones that quietly ring with the music of the land." - Montreal Gazette "John Steffler
is one of our finest lyric poets in mid-career." "[John Steffler's poems] reveal an unexpected side to the exotic and hidden dimensions of the familiar . Part keen-eyed naturalist, part exuberant philosopher, Steffler memorializes the terrain of his beloved Newfoundland, in particular, with disarming whimsy and grace. His descriptions are vivid and metaphysically resonant, too." - Barbara Carey, Toronto |
|