What I’m Reading: and the river, too: Pictures and Poems of the South Shore

Photography by Marty Gervais, Poetry by Kim Fahner, Peter Hrastovec, John B. Lee, Micheline Maylor, Teajai Travis (Black Moss Press, 2025)

Like Windsor, the photographs in and the river, too are gritty, bold, beautiful; each is a story; each is a poem. Music overflows the poetry – perfect since we grew up on Motown, on the jazz that crossed the river, on our own homegrown – and each poem also suggests the grit and sensuous experiences that connect the poets to the place.

Some of my favourite lines include:

“I am a crow, caught on lift of current, restless and open.” (“Migration Patterns,” Kim Fahner)

“…but the guy-wires of the bridge 
appear strung in pairs 
like piano wires / carrying the music of the wind”
(“The Gordie Howe International Bridge,” John B. Lee)

“A smooth descent down a fretless spin.” (“Honey Suckle Steel Beneath a Blue Sun (Jazz)” Teajai Travis)

“Here in the alley,” a phrase repeated, beginning four of the seven stanzas, creating music and echoes (“Here in the Alley, Peter Hrastovec)

“I’m made from rivermud, muck-sludge with scrap metal,
truck traffic, human traffic, tunnel traffic, bridge traffic
Georgian buildings turned to falafel shops. A wreckage
[…]
(“Ground Zero: Ouellette and Riverside,” Micheline Maylor — I love the rush of it, the music of it, the truth of it)

Black Moss Press, 2025