Fern G. Z. Carr

Fern G. Z. Carr is a contemporary Canadian poet who resides in Kelowna, British Columbia. A full member of the League of Canadian Poets and the Federation of BC Writers, Fern G. Z. Carr is the author of Shards of Crystal (Silver Bow Publishing, 2018).[1] Carr is a former lawyer, teacher, and past president of both the Kelowna branch of the BC Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA) and Project Literacy Central Okanagan Society. She composes and translates poetry in six languages including Mandarin.[2] She has been published in poetry anthologies, journals, and magazines multiple times in thirty-four countries. One of her poems is currently orbiting the planet Mars aboard NASA's MAVEN spacecraft. [3]

Fern G. Z. Carr
Born1956 (age 6364)
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
OccupationPoet, translator, teacher, lawyer
LanguageEnglish, French, Spanish, Yiddish, Italian, Mandarin
Alma materUniversity of Manitoba;
Collège Universitaire de Saint-Boniface
Period1978 - present
GenrePoetry
Notable worksShards of Crystal; I Am
Notable awardsGoing to Mars with MAVEN; Poem of the Month for Canada
Website
ferngzcarr.com

Personal life and education

Fern G. Z. Carr was born in 1956 in Winnipeg, Manitoba. Carr attended the University of Manitoba where she obtained her Bachelor of Arts degree (BA) and her Bachelor of Laws degree (LLB). She received her Call to the Bar from the Law Society of Manitoba. After briefly practising law, Carr decided to pursue her interest in languages. She enrolled at le Collège Universitaire de Saint-Boniface where she received her Certificat en Éducation and was the recipient of the Manitoba Government Book Prize for highest standing in her program.[4] She subsequently taught French Immersion before moving to Kelowna with her family in 1999. She is married and is the sister-in-law of James Gordon Carr, Member of Parliament.

Writing style and influences

Carr's early poetry from the late 1970s to the mid-1990s is more representative of traditional meter and rhyme. She subsequently began to experiment with different forms and styles while continuing to compose traditional poetry in set forms such as pantoum and ghazal. An admirer of Emily Dickinson, Carr liked the use of em dashes and often incorporated them into her poems. In the 2000s, Carr's poetry style became more eclectic as she experimented with design. This was particularly evident in her visual and concrete poetry as well as in her experimental math / science poems such as "The Fickle Nature of the Parabola"[5] and "Holocaust Genealogy".[6] To date, her stylistic focus is free verse.

While Carr's poetry primarily is written in English, she also composes poems in French, Spanish, Italian, Yiddish and the Chinese Mandarin dialect. Even though she occasionally translates the works of other poets, she tends to focus on bilingual and trilingual side-by-side translations of her own poetry.

Many of Carr's poems were influenced by her early years in Winnipeg's West End where she bore witness to poverty and crime. While this darkness is evident in some of her poetry, she also composes poems which evoke a diverse array of human emotions.

Shards of Crystal

Shards of Crystal reflects a dichotomy and as such, is described as a metamorphosis of darkness to light. Dealing with issues such as suicide, trauma, dementia, cruelty to animals, and the death of a child, the book then gradually changes course. It begins its transformative move towards the beauty of life with poems about musicality, spiritual liberation and the philosophy of existence. It culminates in a philosophical examination of mankind's place in the universe with Carr's signature poem, "I Am".[7]

The imagery in Shards of Crystal parallels the darkness-to-light chronology of Carr's poems. This transition is essentially a redemptive move both literally and metaphorically, reconciling the pain of "Shards" at the outset of the book with the beauty and enlightenment of "Crystal" at the conclusion. Beginning with the darkness of night and becoming progressively lighter, her poems ultimately achieve the illumination of the eternal. This is in keeping with the overarching theme of hope as expressed by the Victor Hugo quote at the start of the book: "Even the darkest night will end and the sun will rise."[8]

Publications

Carr has been published extensively worldwide in Australia, Austria, Canada, China, Cyprus, Finland, France, Holland, India, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Malawi, Mauritius, Mayotte Island, Mexico, Morocco, Nepal, New Zealand, Nigeria, Peru, Philippines, Romania, Seychelles, Singapore, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, Thailand, United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom (in England, Scotland and Wales) and USA.

Additionally, she has written literary non-fiction articles which have been published in the Federation of BC Writers WordWorks Magazine (2020) and Part of the Discourse: An Interdisciplinary Humanities Journal (2019).

Books

  • Shards of Crystal (Silver Bow Publishing, 2018) ISBN 978-1-927616-96-3

Selected anthologies

  • Dreamscapes - 2019
  • Lost and Found - 2019
  • Celestial Musings - 2018
  • Climate of Opinion - 2017
  • Nuclear Impact: Broken Atoms in Our Hands - 2017
  • Fire and Sky - 2016
  • Memory and Loss - 2016
  • Childhood Regained - 2016
  • Amsterdam Quarterly 2015 Yearbook - 2015
  • Contemporary Poetry - An Anthology of Present Day Best Poems Vol. 2 - 2015
  • Love Where the Nights are Twice as Long - 2015
  • A Quiet Shelter There - 2015
  • Storm Cycle 2013 - The Best of Kind of a Hurricane Press - 2014
  • The Body Electric - 2013
  • Voices Israel - 2012
  • Sol: English Writing in Mexico - 2012
  • Butterfly Away - 2011
  • Van Gogh's Ear 7 - 2010

Selected journals

  • The Laurel Review 51.2 - 2018
  • The London Reader - Autumn, 2017
  • The Café Review 27 - Winter, 2016
  • Slant - Summer, 2015
  • Pasque Petals - Fall 2015
  • Whole Terrain 21 - 2014
  • Zona de Carga No. 6 - August 2014
  • MaLa - The Chengdu Bookworm Literary Journal 3 - June 2013
  • Legal Studies Forum XXXVII, No. 1 - 2013
  • phati'tude Literary Magazine 3, No. 3 - Fall 2011
  • The Toronto Quarterly 8 - Nov. 2011
  • White Wall Review 135 - 2011
  • new contrast South African Literary Journal 38.4, No. 152 - Summer 2010
  • The Nashwaak Review 24-25, No. 1 - Summer/Fall 2010
  • Prairie Fire 31, No. 3 - Fall 2010
  • Poetry New Zealand 41 - September 2010
  • Windsor Review 42, No. - 2009

Selected awards and honours

  • Haiku included on the Going to Mars Contest DVD aboard NASA's MAVEN spacecraft which is currently orbiting the planet Mars[9]
  • 2013 Pushcart Prize Nominee - The Worcester Review[10]
  • A winner of Il Premio Nazionale di Letteratura "Il Meleteo di Guido Gozzano" 4° Edizione (Sezione Autori di Lingua Straniera)[11]
  • Poem, "I Am", selected by the Parliamentary Poet Laureate of Canada as Poem of the Month for Canada, May 2010[7]
  • Biographical listing in The World's Lawyer Poets[12]
  • Biographical listing in ABC Bookworld, a reference site for BC literature and authors[13]
  • Featured online in The Globe and Mail[14]
  • Cited as a contributor to India's Prakalpana Movement
  • Poetry air-dropped in Cyprus in conjunction with Spring Poetry Rain
  • Featured poet ("Lumière sur") Sipay Revue Littéraire Seychelloise Numéro 12[15]
  • Former League of Canadian Poets' Poet in Residence mentoring young writers
  • Invited to do poetry readings in Mandarin for Chinese New Year 2020 and Spring Lantern Festival 2020
  • Featured solo guest presenter at the Rotary Centre for the Arts Mary Irwin Theatre in conjunction with Culture Days and the Kelowna Arts and Culture Festival 2019 [16]
  • Volunteer spotlight for her work in the promotion of literacy[17]
  • A winner of the Great Canadian Haiku Contest with Carr's poems set to music and performed by Juno Award-nominated musician Royal Wood
  • Shards of Crystal selected as Poetry Super Highway Bookstore Poets of the Week Featured Book
  • One of three Canadian adjudicators for the Manitoba Writers' Guild Lansdowne Prize for Poetry / Prix Lansdowne de poésie (formerly Aqua Books Lansdowne Prize for Poetry)
  • Western Canadian Judge - Ford & Jaguar Automotive Journalist of the Year Awards (for two consecutive years)
  • Winner of multiple contests and awards

Interviews and articles

Goodreads posted an Ask the Author series of questions to Fern G. Z. Carr. Topics included: source of ideas for her book, inspiration, current projects, advice for aspiring writers, the best thing about being a writer and dealing with writer's block.[18]

Thomas Whyte curates a series of interviews with poets entitled poetry mini interviews. Fern G. Z. Carr was chosen to be one of these featured poets. She was the subject of a series of six weekly interviews to discuss her thoughts about poetry and her work.[19]

Kelowna Now - In Focus did an extensive feature interview about Carr's life, writing career and achievements.[20]

CBC Radio One (Canadian Broadcasting Corporation) host Sarah Penton invited Carr to do a special guest segment on her Radio West show.[21]

University of Winnipeg - P.I. New Poetry on CKUW 95.9 FM.

Whole Terrain, the environmental literary journal of Antioch University (Keene, NH, USA) featured an author profile with Carr. The poet was questioned as to her reflective environmental practices and how they related to her poetry.[22]

Poet, Marissa Bell Toffoli, interviewed Fern G. Z. Carr on Words with Writers W³ Sidecar. She interviewed Carr about her poetry writing and revision practices.[23]

Ryerson University's (Toronto ON, Canada) online newspaper, The Eye Opener, published an article entitled "Beyond the White Wall." It included references to Carr's multiple contributions to their journal, The White Wall Review.[24]

Subsequent to Carr having been included in a database project[12] in conjunction with research conducted by West Virginia University law professor, Dr. James R. Elkins, The Globe and Mail featured Fern G. Z. Carr in their online arts section.[14]

References

  1. "Shards of Crystal: Amazon.ca: Fern G. Z. Carr: Books". Amazon.ca. Retrieved 6 January 2019.
  2. "Fern G. Z. Carr". Ferngzcarr.com. Retrieved 6 January 2019.
  3. http://lasp.colorado.edu/home/maven/2013/07/15/public-voting-opens-on-maven-haiku-contest. Retrieved on May 22, 2019.
  4. The University of Manitoba 104th Annual Convocation. 1983.
  5. Carr, Fern G. Z. (Fall 2018). "The Fickle Nature of the Parabola". Windsor Review. 43 (2): 128.
  6. Carr, Fern G. Z. (July 2016). "Holocaust Genealogy". mgversion2. 85: 84.
  7. "The Parliamentary Poet Laureate". Bdp.parl.ca. Retrieved 6 January 2019.
  8. Hugo, Victor (1987). Les Misérables. Signet Classics. ISBN 9780451525260.
  9. http://lasp.colorado.edu/home/maven/2013/07/15/public-voting-opens-on-maven-haiku-contest/. Retrieved on May 22, 2019.
  10. Mulligan, Diane Vanaskie. "Pushcart Nominees". Theworcesterreview.org. Retrieved 6 January 2019.
  11. "Poems 2014 by country (selected by the judges)". Benvenuti su amicidiguidogozzano!. Retrieved 25 December 2018.
  12. "World--Lawyer Poets". Lawlit.net. Retrieved 6 January 2019.
  13. http://abcbookworld.com/writer/22170/ Retrieved on April 14, 2020.
  14. "Kudos to Fern G. Z. Carr, poet lawyer". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 6 January 2019.
  15. "SIPAY" (PDF). Sipayrevue.files.wordpress.com (12th ed.). Retrieved 6 January 2019.
  16. https://www.kelownadailycourier.ca/calendar/event_fc8e2048-bae3-11e9-a845-5cb9017beffc.html. Retrieved on 6 October 2019.
  17. "Get Volinspired! - Get Involved". Castanet.net. Retrieved 6 January 2019.
  18. "Fern G.Z. Carr answers your questions — Ask the Author". Goodreads.com. Retrieved 6 January 2019.
  19. "poetry mini interviews". Poetryminiiterviews.blogspot.com. Retrieved 21 April 2019.
  20. https://www.kelownanow.com/good_stuff/good_people/news/In_Focus/In_Focus_Fern_G_Z_Carr/#fs_74066. Retrieved on May 11, 2019
  21. https://www.cbc.ca/listen/live-radio/1-96-radio-west (Select airdate Feb 25 2020) Retrieved on April 14, 2020.
  22. "Metamorphosis author profile: Fern G.Z. Carr". Wholeterrain.com. 10 October 2017. Retrieved 6 January 2019.
  23. "Q&A With Writer Fern G Z Carr". 3sidecar.tumblr.com. Retrieved January 13, 2019.
  24. "Behind the White Wall". The Eyeopener. Retrieved 6 January 2019.
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