Q & A

Adrienne Gruber’s third full poetry collection, Q & A, is a poetic memoir detailing a first pregnancy, birth and early postpartum period. The poet is both traumatized and transformed by the birth of her daughter. She is compelled by the dark places birth takes her and as she examines and revisits those places, a grotesque history of the treatment of pregnant and birthing women reveals itself.

 

Watch the Book Launch and Reading:

 

Praise for Q & A:

“To give birth, to bear life—to release and capture that experience in words: this is the crystalline achievement of Q & A. Gruber’s poetry resonates in the hollows of my body, in the fear and hope that accompanies motherhood.” —Marianne Apostolides, author of Deep Salt Water

 

“In Q & A Adrienne Gruber annotates the condition of the pre- and post-partum body, training her ruthless poetic eye on division: cell by cell, mother from daughter, fact from misguided historical tendency. Is this a love poem / or a poem of grief? / When we make something / we lose, she writes. Throughout these poems and their namesake childhood interrogatives, fluids course, sutures tear, ducts leak. Gruber’s ability to command the language of sublime physicality draws motherhood’s grotesque fears close, turning them over like an infant on a lap, examining perfections and dangers with intimate scrutiny.” —Elee Kraljii Gardiner, author of Trauma Head

 

Press Coverage for Q & A:

 

20 works of Canadian poetry to check out in spring 2019 —CBC Books

Most Anticipated: Our 2019 Spring Poetry Preview —49th Shelf

26 Books to Celebrate for Poetry Month —49th Shelf

“Q & A traverses fraught terrain only to end up, on its final page, with a resolution that feels potent andnot unimportantlyearned. These are poems that confront their subject matter directly and with scant regard for a reader’s refined sensibilities… What [Gruber] offers us is nothing less than the stuff of life itself.” —Steven Beattie, Quill & Quire

Poetry Grrrowl: Adrienne Gruber + Q & A —All Lit Up

Adrienne Gruber on how Elizabeth Ross’s collection After Birth offers ‘everything I ever want in poetry’ CBC Books

“The poems in Q & A exist precisely within that intimate space, intricately observed, questioned and explored; hers is an intimate and domestic territory Margaret Christakos might have pulled apart with language, but Gruber pulls apart through a different lens, articulating short narratives that focus on moments both large and small through an urgency, anxiety and the discovery that letting go is as important as holding close.” —rob mclennan’s blog

“By the time you flip the last page, I guarantee you are not going to stop thinking the endless possibilities of emotions that come along with being a mother and the before and after birth of a beautiful child.” —Hasan Namir, The Poetry Question

Pregnant Lines and Pauses: A Review of Q & A —Phyllis Parham Reeve, The Ormsby Review

Photographing a Black Hole: Adrienne Gruber and Elizabeth Ross in Conversation —PRISM International

“This collection is simultaneously a poetic memoir, a love letter (“or a poem of grief”) from mother to daughter, and a birthbook, recording conception, gestation, birth, and some of the postpartum period.” —Jami Macarty, The Maynard

A ‘Best of’ List of 2019 Canadian Poetry Books —rob mclennan, Dusie

“Q & A is a fascinating collection of poems because it pulls back the veil on things that haven’t often been spoken about when it comes to the bodily journeys that women undertake during their lifetimes… These are poems that don’t shirk from the gruesome physicality of birthing, but there is beauty here, too, in the poet’s love for her daughter, and in the recognition that there are many sides to the prism of a woman’s life.”  —Kim Fahner, periodicities

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