Ascent: Ascent Aspirations Magazine
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Order the Book: Mail cheques to David Fraser, 1560 Arbutus Drive,Nanoose
Bay, BC, V9P 9C8
Price (including shipping and handling) $17.95 CND or $17.95 US (Shipped to Us destinations)
or $19.95 US (Shipped to all international destinations except the USA).
Please include your full address and name along with your email address.
About the Book: Testimonials and Reviews
This publication is his first
collection of poetry. Whether writing poetry or short fiction, David examines
characters struggling with time and entropy, with relationships and with finding
meaning in lives often caught up and stagnant in their own existence, their
aging and their loss. Many poems deal with the darkside of the human condition
as a political protest to man’s inhumanity to man, and to man’s blatant disregard
for our greatest resource, Mother Earth. However within this dark perspective
there is tenderness and hope and lyrical imagery of what life wonderfully can
be.
"David Fraser looks up, looks around him, takes in his surroundings,
and does a good job of reporting on nature as a vital restorative element in our lives." - David Chorlton
"David Fraser's 'Going to the Well' is a remarkable journey filled with
a zest for all that life offers. His poems surprise, delight, and
enrich the reader. They truly deepen our understanding of the human
condition...all in all, this collection represents a most impressive
debut." - Vernon Waring
"David's words will linger in your mind long after your eyes have left the
page."-Pam Daum
I found in Mr. Fraser's work not only elegiac words about human beings self
dispossed from their natural endowment, but also words of hope and optimism
arising from reverence for things that charm and challenge us with the riddle as
well as the promise of their existence. Indeed Heidegger's comments came to
mind. The philosopher, in this context, holds poets in high esteem and comments
in his Introduction To Metaphysics that " Poetry, like the thinking of the
philosopher, has always so much world space to spare that in it each thing - a
tree, a mountain, a house, the cry of a bird - loses all indifference and
commonplaceness " - Al Staffetti
It was a pleasure reading your book, and I want to say that "Going To The Well" is probably one of the best I’ve read so far. Your skillful means of penetrating into the heart of darkness is profound and full of insights, that leaves one questioning themselves, about ones own struggle, failure, guilt and ills, as well as natures struggle with society.
Overall it attempts to extract truth from all directions and inspires a broad level of perception, exposing a deeper sense of existence too. By far, the book completes a personal experience and an image of humanity’s dark and lighter side of the self.
I have enjoyed the book to the fullest, all the way from Singapore. - Albert Lawrence
"David's poetry embues vivid imagery and great depth of feeling.
He has the ability to draw on inside each experience so as to touch
the very essence of life itself... The vocabulary is very evocative
for me as a painter and at the same time allows me to use my own imagination at will.
I loved reading the poems." - Philippa Haidu
Review:
Going to the Well
By David Fraser
2004; 94 pp; Pa; Ascent Aspirations Poetry,
1560 Arbutus Drive, Nanoose Bay,
British Columbia, Canada
V9P 9C8.
By SAM VARGO
David Fraser's first collection of poetry doesn't celebrate society's virtues.
The work shows the darker side of humankind's innert nature. Much of the poetry
deals with man's inhumanity to man, with stagnant lives and an ongoing entropy
consuming all. Fraser's own self-described way of writing involves dealving into
the darker side of human existence and how we interrelate not only within society,
but also with nature. Even naturalism plays a part, with some of the collection concerned
with society's relationship and constant adversity with natural law.
If all this sounds pessimistic, it is. In reading Going to the Well,
one would most likely come away with a feeling that some of the things
we do, although accepted as standards, are not the best we can do, nor
should they be seen as acceptable norms. Compounding the feeling is the
realization that Fraser does not write of the big macrocosmic universe
as we know it, but rather, the microsmic simple things, such as: watching
credits after a movie, picking blackberries, how compost turns to fertilizer,
a son's concept of his father, scenarios taking place at a thrift shop, and two
curmudgeons fighting over a virginal, and very artificial pristine sign of spring
(a man-made cherry blossom tree). Fraser's 94 poems fit together like a jigsaw puzzle.
Each little aspect of living evolves into an awesome and stark big picture/puzzle.
The poems contained in this weird didactic yet existential mixture are are short,
clipped and in the tradition of minimalism. Words are treated like a highly budgeted
monetary system -- with a stringent stinginess wherein not a consonant nor a vowel
is wasted. The poetry is clear and to the point, not pretentious. Most of the work is
relatively easy to grasp. Reasoning and logic prevail and the poems do not contain meanings
or inticacies that are hidden, nor are any dressed up in pretention. Fraser seems to have
written Going to the Well for an audience broader than just the scholar, poet or literati'.
Samples of Poetry in Going to the Well