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Tell Them It Was Mozart

by (author) Angeline Schellenberg

Publisher
Brick Books
Initial publish date
Sep 2016
Subjects
Family, Canadian, Autism Spectrum Disorders

EPUB Accessibility Specification 1.0 AA

Single logical reading order

Table of contents navigation

Print-equivalent page numbering

Short alternative textual descriptions

  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781771314435
    Publish Date
    Sep 2016
    List Price
    $11.99

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Description

Linked poems that uncover the ache and whimsy of raising children on the autism spectrum.

Through public judgments, detouring dreams and unspoken prayers, Tell Them It Was Mozart, Angeline Schellenberg’s debut collection, traces both a slow bonding and the emergence of a defiant humour. This is a book that keens and cherishes, a work full of the earthiness and transcendence of mother-love. One of the pleasures of this collection is its playful range of forms: there are erasure poems, prose poems, lists, found poems, laments, odes, monologues and dialogues in the voices of the children, even an oulipo that deconstructs the DSM definition of autism. From a newborn "glossed and quivering" to a child conquering the fear of strange toilets, Tell Them It Was Mozart is bracing in its honesty, healing in its jubilance.

About the author

Angeline Schellenberg's poetry has appeared in Prairie Fire, CV2, TNQ, Rhubarb, Room, Geez, Wordgathering, Lemon Hound, and The Society, as well as in anthologies. Her first chapbook, Roads of Stone (The Alfred Gustav Press), was released in May 2015. Her poetry won third prize in the 2014 Banff Centre Bliss Carman Poetry Award Contest and was shortlisted for Arc Poetry Magazine's 2015 Poem of the Year. Angeline lives in Winnipeg with her husband, their two teenagers, and a German shepherd/corgi.

Angeline Schellenberg's profile page

Editorial Reviews

"By turns, Angeline Schellenberg's words are blunt, musical, unflinching, transcendent. Her speaker raises two children on the autism spectrum, but she is never a martyr, never a victim, never a saint. Schellenberg has drawn a woman who turns the experience inside out--finding its humour, its turbulence, and ultimately, its joy."

Kimmy Beach