Description

Book Synopsis

From a balcony overlooking an urban back lane, a poet watches those walking below – their identities unknown and yet grasped through details of habit that reflect the strangers’ inner selves. In watching for life David Zieroth ponders questions about how to live and how to continue.



Trade Review

“This book is an unassuming masterpiece. Unassuming in that its speaker is a solitary apartment dweller who spends his time looking entirely away from himself into his back lane surroundings. A masterpiece in that its speaker reveals how he is nothing except what he sees outside himself in human, creaturely, and even mineral disguise. And yet this is not what he is; he is the watcher looking through him, haunting him, sending out his gaze within which is boundless, selfless awareness ‘watching for life.’” Russell Thornton, author of Answer to Blue


“David Zieroth pries open the deepest philosophical and psychological workings of humanity in the most ordinary moments. At turns humorous, thoughtful, and surreal, Zieroth’s poems are wise and full of sharp observations, sussing out profound meaning in someone’s gait as they walk the lane below or in the way a gull floats with ‘his immaculate white, airy curves.’ You'll be quick to agree with Zieroth when he writes: ‘all I can say / it’s better to take notice.’” Al Rempel, author of Undiscovered Country


“This stunning collection, the work of a poet at the height of his maturity, creates a paradigm for the human condition with its inherent loneliness. Here the speaker ‘watches for life’ from an urban balcony and evokes the characters and moods of those who pass below, capturing something of their souls and reflecting his essential empathy for fellow humans. Aware of a godlike visual advantage in his ‘eyrie’ or ‘control room,’ and at one point invoking ‘a clown in his mad pulpit,’ David Zieroth delights us with playful humour and refreshing self-irony, all the while realizing a vision of life full of bird imagery in which ordinary crows sometimes shine in sunlight.” Gillian Harding-Russell, author of Uninterrupted and In Another Air


“This traveller’s point of view extends into … watching for life … the world Zieroth views outside his third-floor apartment, the comings and goings in the laneway below him. If such a notion seems restrictive, think again. The poet has discovered a richly varied vista beneath him.” The BC Review

watching for life

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A Paperback by David Zieroth

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    View other formats and editions of watching for life by David Zieroth

    Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
    Publication Date: 11/15/2022 12:00:00 AM
    ISBN13: 9780228014744, 978-0228014744
    ISBN10: 0228014743
    Also in:
    Poetry

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    From a balcony overlooking an urban back lane, a poet watches those walking below – their identities unknown and yet grasped through details of habit that reflect the strangers’ inner selves. In watching for life David Zieroth ponders questions about how to live and how to continue.



    Trade Review

    “This book is an unassuming masterpiece. Unassuming in that its speaker is a solitary apartment dweller who spends his time looking entirely away from himself into his back lane surroundings. A masterpiece in that its speaker reveals how he is nothing except what he sees outside himself in human, creaturely, and even mineral disguise. And yet this is not what he is; he is the watcher looking through him, haunting him, sending out his gaze within which is boundless, selfless awareness ‘watching for life.’” Russell Thornton, author of Answer to Blue


    “David Zieroth pries open the deepest philosophical and psychological workings of humanity in the most ordinary moments. At turns humorous, thoughtful, and surreal, Zieroth’s poems are wise and full of sharp observations, sussing out profound meaning in someone’s gait as they walk the lane below or in the way a gull floats with ‘his immaculate white, airy curves.’ You'll be quick to agree with Zieroth when he writes: ‘all I can say / it’s better to take notice.’” Al Rempel, author of Undiscovered Country


    “This stunning collection, the work of a poet at the height of his maturity, creates a paradigm for the human condition with its inherent loneliness. Here the speaker ‘watches for life’ from an urban balcony and evokes the characters and moods of those who pass below, capturing something of their souls and reflecting his essential empathy for fellow humans. Aware of a godlike visual advantage in his ‘eyrie’ or ‘control room,’ and at one point invoking ‘a clown in his mad pulpit,’ David Zieroth delights us with playful humour and refreshing self-irony, all the while realizing a vision of life full of bird imagery in which ordinary crows sometimes shine in sunlight.” Gillian Harding-Russell, author of Uninterrupted and In Another Air


    “This traveller’s point of view extends into … watching for life … the world Zieroth views outside his third-floor apartment, the comings and goings in the laneway below him. If such a notion seems restrictive, think again. The poet has discovered a richly varied vista beneath him.” The BC Review

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