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Optic Nerve
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03 April 2023

SHORTLISTED FOR THE 2024 JM ABRAHAM POETRY AWARD
LONGLISTED FOR THE 2023 BMO WINTERSET AWARD
Poems using fervent whimsy and wordplay to examine photography and seeing.
Peering inside eyeballs, pondering the paradox of absent stars, and meditating on street scenes by André Kertész, these poems squint sidelong at our ways of seeing the world. Through playful poems about photography and visual perception, Hollett dissects auroras and quarks, atmospheric phenomena, potatoes, bomb craters and peat bog cadavers. This darkly comic collection is shadowed by entoptic paparazzi, haunted by peripheral visions. Born of attentive walking and looking, of footsteps and snapshots, it bears witness to art history and alluvial light, portable keyholes, the pandemic, climate change, and the sheer strangeness of seeing everyday things with ecstatic eyes.
"If Elizabeth Bishop and Pablo Neruda had collaborated on a book called The Art of Looking, it might read something like this luminous and assured debut collection from Matthew Hollett. Here is the poet as photographer, framing and reframing each image so that the reader might see it anew. I'm struck by how alive these poems are, animated by light and wind, frost and ocean, music and cinema and spider's web. As soon as I finished reading this collection, I immediately wanted to start it again."—Jen Currin, author of School andHider/Seeker
"Who knew having your brain poked through your eye holes would be such a good time? With disarmingly honest curiosity, these poems scrutinize open wounds of all kinds—a scratch, a bulldozed building, and a cloudless sky—and remain buoyant. Optic Nerve teaches us that anything can be a light show if you know how to look. It's ekphrasis at its best."—Mary Germaine, author of Congratulations, Rhododendrons
"Optic Nerve is a dazzling and timely collection. Hollett writes as if from beneath the skin of the everyday, as if with super-powered vision."—Sara Baume, author of Seven Steeples
"At its simplest, this collection is held together by an underlying theme of viewing, investigating photography and perception. At its most complicated, this work blows wide open the boundaries between sentient and non-sentient to reveal entire contextual universes: a rapid-fire montage of possibilities that shimmer at shutter-speed above the deeper questions that underlie many of these deft and searching poems."—Aley Waterman, Riddle Fence
"Tender and playful, these poems are an intimate interaction with all that surrounds us—inviting us to stop, blink, and look again."—Stella Cali, PRISM International
,Matthew Hollett is a writer and visual artist in St. John's, Newfoundland (Ktaqmkuk). His work explores landscape and memory through photography, writing and walking. His first book, Album Rock (2018), is a work of creative nonfiction and poetry investigating a curious photograph taken in Newfoundland in the 1850s. He won the 2020 CBC Poetry Prize for "Tickling the Scar," a poem about walking the Lachine Canal during the early days of the pandemic. He has previously been awarded the NLCU Fresh Fish Award for Emerging Writers, The Fiddlehead's Ralph Gustafson Prize for Best Poem, and VANL-CARFAC's Critical Eye Award for art writing. He is a graduate of the MFA program at NSCAD University.