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Canadian poet From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Carole Glasser Langille is a Canadian poet and author of three books of poetry.
This section of a biography of a living person does not include any references or sources. (September 2023) |
Langille is the author of four books of poetry, two collections of short stories, two children's books, and a non-fiction book, Doing Time: Writing Workshops in Prison.
Her second book of poetry, In Cannon Cave, was nominated for a Governor General's Award in 1997, and for the Atlantic Poetry Prize in 1998.[citation needed] Church of the Exquisite Panic: The Ophelia Poems was nominated for the Atlantic Poetry Prize in 2013.[citation needed]
I Am What I Am Because You Are What You Are, her second collection of short stories, was nominated for the Alistair MacLeod Award for Short Fiction.[citation needed] Her children's book, Where the Wind Sleeps, was the Canadian Children's Book Center Choice in 1996.[citation needed]
Several selections from Langille's book of poetry, Late In A Slow Time, have been adapted to music by Canadian composer Chan Ka Nin. The production, also called "Late In A Slow Time", debuted at the 2006 Sound Symposium in St. John's, Newfoundland, and is on Duo Concertante's CD Wildbird.[citation needed] "The Depth of This Quiet", by Canadian composer Alice Ping Yee Ho, interprets poems by Langille using a combination of Eastern and Western instruments and was performed in New York City in 2017.[citation needed]
Originally from New York City, where she studied with the poets John Ashbery and Carolyn Forche among others, Langille now lives in Black Point, Nova Scotia.[citation needed]
She has taught at The Humber School for Writing Summer Program, Maritime Writer's Workshop, the Community of Writers in Tatamagouche, and at Women's Words the University of Alberta.[citation needed] She has taught creative writing at Mount Saint Vincent University, writing for the arts at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design, and currently teaches poetry at Dalhousie University.[citation needed]
Carole has given poetry readings in Athens; Delhi; Prague; London, England; New York City; Kirkcudbright, Scotland; and throughout Canada.[citation needed] She has received Canada Council Grants for poetry, non-fiction, and fiction.[citation needed]
"Late" in Carole Glasser Langille's new book (Late in a Slow Time) comes to mean not "too late" but "recently achieved, after long experience." Her poetry takes the always provisional knowledge derived from living and thinking, and produces the delight of fine and fresh perception - a delight constantly enacted in memorable language, sparkling and original yet direct and simple. Wise and funny, private and public, various in their tones and subjects, Langille's poems never lose their thread, they project "To eat life's brevity/the way the North wind eats winter/and grows strong."[2]
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