Alison Calder has published widely on Canadian prairie literature and culture, including critical editions of Settlers of the Marsh and Over Prairie Trails by Frederick Philip Grove, and Desire Never Leaves: The Poetry of Tim Lilburn . Her poetry collections are Wolf Tree and In the Tiger Park , and with Jeanette Lynes she is the co-author of Ghost Works: Improvisations in Letters and Poems . She teaches Canadian literature and creative writing at the University of Manitoba.
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"The wonderfully articulated, poised, often epigrammatic poems, picking up glints from the cutting edge of neuroscience, are so beguiling. The author asks us to look at our brains and implicitly ourselves and our lives, our forgotten and remembered tasks, through the lens of bioscience refracted in turn through the mind of the poet. They are playful, witty, wry and often poignant." Raymond Tallis Praise for Alison Calder: "I'm in love with Alison Calder's poems." Jeanette Lynes "Alison Calder's poems are wonderfully imaginative and wholly original. Hers is a fascinating, accomplished, inspired and inspiring new voice in Canadian poetry." Helen Humphreys "Alison Calder displays a wonderful ear for the sounds of language, from the diction of science to the phrasing of fairy tales." Alice Major , author of Welcome to the Anthropocene "What a brilliant, peculiar journey Calder has conjured through the brain Her rendering of this extreme strangeness intimate to us is a powerful, upending achievement." Tim Lilburn , author of Kill-site " Synaptic is a remarkable book that puts neuroscientific approaches to perception in tension with the mythic and artistic practices we use to understand and give shape to our worlds. These are poems that will make you think differently about what the microscope sees and what the mind makes." Adam Dickinson, author of The Polymers and Anatomic

