Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Kroetsch, Robert (Vol. 132) - George Bowery (review date April 1989)


Kroetsch, Robert (Vol. 132) - George Bowery (review date April 1989)

George Bowery (review date April 1989)

SOURCE: A review of The Lovely Treachery of Words, in Books in Canada, Vol. 18, No. 3, April, 1989, p. 22.

[In the following review, Bowery praises Kroetsch's literary criticism in The Lovely Treachery of Words.]

In Canada we often write “poet-novelist” before a writer’s name. We have to do this more than most countries do. Of course most of these poet-novelists toss off an essay from time to time. But we seldom feel that it would be sensible to write “poet-novelist-critic.”

Margaret Atwood writes reviews and makes the odd address to a group of elected representatives. A long time ago Michael Ondaatje wrote a little chapbook on Leonard Cohen; bp Nichol wrote in all three forms, but you had to take his word about which was which.

Robert Kroetsch was successful first as a novelist. Then he became the first novelist to influence the poets as a poet. Next to Atwood he is...

[The entire page is 995 words long]

Join eNotes

The above is a free excerpt. Get total access to this content with the: