The Annotated Bee and Me
by Tim Bowling

March 2010 | Poetry | $18.95 CAN | $18.95 US
1554470862 | 9781554470860 | Trade Paper

A few years ago, while sorting through a box of family mementos, Tim Bowling discovered a slim volume which his Great Aunt Gladys Muttart had privately printed in 1961–a memoir of her family’s beekeeping adventures in Edmonton between 1906 and 1929. As he read and re-read the text of this little book, Bowling felt that "two very different ways of life, the early years of two very different centuries, began to merge, as if the past was something the present gathers from the fields on a summer day."

Bowling’s discovery of The Bee and Me also got him thinking about the way we record and annotate the past, and about "those fat Norton anthologies of Modern Literature where now even a reference to yesterday is footnoted as ‘a twenty-four hour period preceding the present twenty-four hour period,’ which made me chuckle at the whole notion of literary success (which too many writers define as having their work appear in such university textbooks). And it occurred to me, what if somebody annotated a text that was not only NOT famous but which also existed in only a few private copies kept in the bottom drawers of my elderly relatives’ bedroom dressers? And what if the annotations were not clever forays of career-making criticism but simply poems, and poems that set out to respond to the large themes of Birth and Death and Time and Memory, keeping in mind that there is always room for humour and irony too in those grand old ballrooms of the human condition?"

The collection is divided into two sections. In the first, Bowling weaves his own verse and excerpts from The Bee and Me into a long poem which is part tribute to kin and part lament for modern life, an exercise which delivers him to "a day when you’re neither alive nor dead / but so conscious of both conditions that you’ve entered the hive." In the second section, titled "Out of the Hive, Into the World" Bowling wrestling with the "confusion of loving too much the world." Its poems touch on family, literature, salmon fishing and beekeeping lore, hinting at how in facing the unvarnished facts of one’s brief life one might honestly annotate their experience: "You build an immunity over time to Time / or you fall among the dried husks of the bees / on the grass"

Author Biography

Tim Bowling is the author of numerous collections of poetry, including Fathom, The Book Collector, and The Memory Orchard. He has also published three novels, including The Bone Sharps and The Paperboy’s Winter. He has twice been shortlisted for the Governor General’s Award for Poetry and has won the Canadian Authors' Association Award for Poetry and two Alberta Book Awards. In 2008, he was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship. Bowling lives in Edmonton, Alberta.