Jaspreet Singh’s “Dreams of the Epoch & the Rock”: A Book Launch and Readings
Piano Lounge, Green College, UBC
Wednesday, January 29, 5-6:30 pm, with reception to follow
Anthropocene Dialogues: Readings, Short Talks, and Conversations
“I love everything about it.” — Forrest Gander
“This book speaks to/for so many.” — Daphne Marlatt
“A eureka moment in the lifelong experiment.” —Nick Thran
“These poems spark an inexplicable sensation.” —Kim Nekarda
“Singh is a poet of light.” — Shazia Hafiz Ramji
Jaspreet Singh is the author of acclaimed poetry collections, non-fiction, novels, short stories, and a memoir. More and more his work engages with deep time and the ecological crisis.
He began writing short pieces in the late 1990s and eventually chose to be a full-time writer rather than pursue a career as a research scientist. Since that time, he has published eight books—non-fiction, fiction, poetry. Increasingly these days his creative writing work engages with the new epoch, the Anthropocene. The concept of the Anthropocene (even when described informally) challenges the strange modern separation between “nature” and “humanity,” destabilizes our human-centric maps and our sense of time, and creates new forms of affect and thought; it calls for an integration of diverse disciplines to address the climate crisis and interspecies relationships, and to further the project of decolonization. All his books published after 2019—non-fiction and fiction—are an earnest attempt in this direction.
Helium (2013) and Chef (2008)—his earlier novels—were published internationally by Bloomsbury and received both popular and critical acclaim. Chef explored the damaged landscapes of Kashmir. It was a finalist for a Commonwealth Writers’ prize and won the Georges Bugnet Award. Helium investigated genocidal violence and was a 2013 Observer Best Book of the Year in the UK. The Globe and Mail called it a “tour de force” and the Financial Times described it as a “powerful meditation on historical forgetting.” My Mother, My Translator—his 2021 memoir—has been called an “indispensable, inimitable” book “that reshapes memoir.” It was a finalist for the Betsy Warland Between Genres Award, and the recipient of the 2022 City of Calgary W.O. Mitchell Book Prize. His newest collection of poems “Dreams of the Epoch & the Rock” was published in Canada in November 2024.
Jaspreet will be in residence at Green College for four months beginning in January 2025.
Award-winning Vancouver poet Daphne Marlatt’s many publications include poetry, fiction, critical prose, and drama. Steveston, her 1970s long poem collaboration with photographer Robert Minden, conveyed the lives of fisher people at the mouth of the Fraser (Sto:lo) River, then already polluted. Liquidities (2013) reprised her earlier Vancouver Poems, adding a new title section merging the contemporary city with its environmental situation. Her recent poetry, including a forthcoming title, Splinters and Streams from Chax Press, Arizona, intensifies this eco-awareness focused mainly around water.
January 29, 2025
9:00 am to 10:30 am
Coach House
6201 Cecil Green Park Rd