The poems assembled in Orion Sweeping take nothing at face value. What are we to make of a radioactive souvenir, a shape-shifting dog, landscapes made strange by time? The speakers gathered here seek to set the record straight: a mink gives advice; a wolf disputes a rumour; a photographer zooms in on a kill; a military strategist gives lessons in peace. But the sum of the evidence is not bleak. A baby arrives as robustly as a whale; the solidarity of marriage is enacted in surprising ways; father and daughter share a gift for reprieve. Under the penetrating gaze of these poems, beauty and tenderness come quietly into view.
Praise for Orion Sweeping
“Beautiful and tender, these poems invoke a species of perception that is intimately attentive to wildness, nature, aging and loss. Todkill’s language always leaves room for the reader, giving breadth and dignity to even its most personal moments. This is the work of a mature poet at the height of their craft.”— from the jurors of the Gerald Lampert Memorial Award
“This is the mature work of a powerful poet at home in her craft. What a pleasure to ride sidecar in this delicate, exquisite probing of the wilds beyond, among, within.” — David Huebert, author of Peninsula Sinking and Chemical Valley
“Anne Marie Todkill’s language is as natural as the movements of the hawk her narrator keenly observes eviscerating its prey. There’s no fancy footwork here, only frankness, necessity, clarity, humility, and an amply rewarded devotion to craft.” — Anita Lahey, Best Canadian Poetry series editor and author of The Last Goldfish: A True Tale of Friendship
Press Coverage:
22 debut Canadian poetry collections to read for National Poetry Month — CBC
“Orion Sweeping is a poetry of observation and conversation, a lyric for ‘the reckless earth.’ Poems across the collection, clustered thematically, consider the cosmic, the particular and the personal.” — Michael Edwards, Arc Poetry Magazine
“Unlike books that invoke the wonder of other species, this does not do the seemingly obligatory hectoring last chapter of how we have destroyed it all. She starts with the destruction and moves into the continual genesis.” — Pearl Pirie, The League of Canadian Poets
“It is clear that Anne Marie Todkill is a poet who cares deeply about all life forms and Earth; her poems make apparent the ‘sacred and pragmatic’ as they share ‘the exhausted space of love.'” — Jami Macarty, Canthius

