One of the greatest mad, sad literary love affairs of the twentieth century was that between poets Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes. In her collection of poems, Hurdle adapts her own research on their lives to explore the love and loss in this relationship of poetic collaboration and rivalry, which lasts, in Hurdle’s recreation, even after Plath’s suicide in 1963 and Hughes’ death in 1998. At points, the poet-narrator forms a literary ménage à trois with the two poets as she struggles obsessively to understand their own lives as individual artists and their love-torn relationship.
In the final sections, the envious poet-narrator loses her privileged place as the lover of both Ted and Sylvia. Other voices, including those of family members, a late night talk show host, a holocaust survivor, and literary critics, address Plath, whose poetry has now entered the wider public domain. For the reader, there is the great joy of finding familiar images from both Plath and Hughes, but images that echo with a new resonance:
The clock ticks.
Outside no star shines
And the thought-fox screams its abandonment
as it circles
three-legged and bloody
in the snow.
“Crystal Hurdle has spent years passionately searching for Sylvia Plath and rescuing her from the suppression and distortion of her life and works by others. Hurdle approaches Plath through many perspectives, several voices, and an array of moods. The result is a credible and deeply moving presentation of ‘the heart’s shivered core.’ This is a book to treasure and reread many times.”
“In this book of linked poems, Crystal Hurdle channels the many voices that comprise the hardest, brightest stars in the constellation of Sylvia Plath’s life. This is an accomplished first book that combines scholarly and poetic responses to Sylvia Plath’s life and work.”
Thought provoking, sexy, edgy, and affecting, Teacher’s Pets explores what happens along the line that should not be crossed. Join a group of Venturers, a Wilderness Training school group, on their treks into the great outdoors of supernatural British Columbia and the mysteries of love and loss. Told in a series of free-verse poems from a lively crew of characters, interspersed with student assignments and the comments on them, discussions in and out of the classroom, journal entries, report cards, lists, and horoscopes, this book will engage both older teens and adults readers alike.
“Fearless and bold, Crystal Hurdle’s witty, multivocal novel in verse reads like a cross between Judy Blume and Into the Wild, with a dash of Gilbert and Sullivan thrown in.”
“The collection reads like a play, resonates like poetry, and is as absorbing as a novel.”
“Unwavering and unsettling, these poems sometimes lift towards the lyrical, but just as often glory in the gutter. Always aware of the ambiguity, Hurdle creates a kind of music, wrung with care, from loves at once ordinary, but in their telling, something more.”
“This poetry is a mash-up of Vladimir Nabokov’s Lolita and and Peggy Atwood’s Journals of Susanna Moodie… Hurdle knows her stuff. Teacher’s Pets is a Grade A accomplishment.”
Sick Witch
(Available May 2020)
“I’m going to get you, my pretty!” The enigmatic Sick Witch lures the
narrator on a metaphoric/literal vision quest through the hallucinatory
terrain of undiagnosed and undiagnosable medical disorders in poems
that playfully explore connections between physical and mental illness. Compelling “fever dreams” tackle disorders, from allergy to somnambulism, from retinal detachment to schizophrenia, from avian flu to ALS, beyond the insular country of the sickbed. Allusion becomes illusion in the blink of an eye, both in the sharp images and also with insight, revelation, confusion and fear, with a supposed control that advances then recedes then does it again and again. Here are tales both grim and Grimm, complemented by “lessons” from other patients, and leavened through a series of Letters to an Insurance Adjuster, who may or may not be a good wizard. Disquieting images from myth and pop culture compel the reader to join in the dance down the yellow brick road. X may mark the spot, but is it malignant? Or does it lead to Health?
"For Poets who Dream of...," "Safely Solipsized...," "Curb your Enthusiam," "Lolita's Apple Speaks,"
"Chess moves," “Specimen." The Capilano Review 3.1-2 (2007): 83-91.
"Blk, Wht, Read All Over." Omnibus Review of Blue Feast, by Shawna Lemay, Sooner by Margaret
Christakos, This Way the Road, by Nina Berkhout. Canadian Literature 192 (2007): 171-173. https://canlit.ca/article/blk-wht-read-all-over/
"The Somnambulist." Vallum 4:2/ 5:1 (2007): 26-28.
"Munchausen's by Proxy," "Growth," Hiring Committee." The Antigonish Review 150 (2007): 98-102.
"William and I Meet," "The Beginning?" The Prairie Journal: A Magazine of Canadian Literature 48 (2007):
12-13, 14.
"Swoop," "Reading While Sick." The Prairie Journal: A Magazine of Canadian Literature 49 (2007): 4, 5.
"Fever Dream: Brainwave." The Dalhousie Review 87.3 (2007): 382-383.
"Fever Dream: Retinal Detachment." The Antigonish Review 161 (2010): 80.
"A Something of Crows." Omnibus review of The Lost Country of Sight, by Neil Aitken, Flutter, by Alice
Burdick, the rush to here, by George Murray, Human Resources, by Rachel Zolf. Canadian Literature 204
(2010): 167-169. https://canlit.ca/article/a-something-of-crows/
“The Art of Work." Omnibus review of A Well-mannered Storm: the Glen Gould poems by Kate Braid,
Kahlo: the World Split Open by Linda Frank, Paper Trail, by Arleen Pare, and The Office Tower Tales, by
Alice Major. Canadian Literature 205 (2010): 136-138. https://canlit.ca/article/the-art-of-work/
"Medical Experiment." The Toronto Quarterly Issue 6 (Sept. 2010): 76.
“Fever Dream: Sick in Suzhou.” The Prairie Journal: A Magazine of Canadian Literature 55 (2010-2011):
17.
“’Freedom of Chickens’ Manifesto.” The Capilano Review 3.13 (2011): 149-153.
“Comic Bildungsromans.” Omnibus review of Fishing for Bacon by Michael Davie, Stripmalling by John
Paul Fiorento, and Lemon by Cordelia Strube. Canadian Literature 208 (2011): 151-153. https://canlit.ca/article/comic-bildungsromans/
“Tropes of Time and Place.” Omnibus Review of Against the Hard Angle, by Matt Robinson, Track and
Trace, by Zachariah Wells, Poems for the Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names, by Soraya Peerbaye,
and R’s Boat, by Lisa Robertson. Canadian Literature 208 (2011): 187-189. https://canlit.ca/article/tropes-of-time-and-place/
“I watch Anne at the Egyptian Exhibit.” The Literary Review of Canada 19.8 (2011): 14.
“Perspective.” The Toronto Quarterly Issue 8 (2011): 86-87.
“Community Spirit? Me?” English Teaching Professional 78 (20012): 50.
“Skip to my Lou,” “What a Woman Wants,” The Canals of Suzhou.” The Windsor Review 45.1 (2012):
123-128.
“I Help Anne Clear Out.” The Literary Review of Canada 20.4 (2012): 18.
“Poetry’s ‘Where is There?’” Omnibus Review of The Secret Signature of Things, by Eve Joseph, In the
Millennium, by Barry McKinnon, Lost Gospels, by Lorri Neilsen Glenn, (made), by Cara Benson.
Canadian Literature 212 (2012): 127 -128. https://canlit.ca/article/poetrys-where-is-there/
“The Step-Daughter Speaks,” “Lolita’s Bicycle Speaks,” “Humbert’s Gun Speaks.” Literary Review of
Canada 20. 8 (2012): 19.
“Symbolism.” Write 40.2 (2012): 27.
Excerpts from “Weaning Love and Death.” Prairie Journal 58 (2012): 10-11.
Excerpts from “Ajar.” The Capilano Review 3.20 (2013): 142-143.
“Distaff Peter Pan.” CV2 36.1 (2013): 54-55.
“’To Hand out the Stars’: Jane Langton’s Fiction for Children.” Bookbird: A journal of International
Children’s Literature 51.4 (2013): 79-82. .
“Shave the Milk Mustache.” Omnibus Review of One in Every Crowd: Stories, by Ivan E. Coyote, A Tinfoil
Sky, by Cyndi Sand-Eveland, A Matter if Life and Death or Something, by Ben Stephenson. Canadian
Literature 217 (2013): 146-148. https://canlit.ca/article/shave-the-milk-mustache/
“The Blind Girl.” New Writing: The International Journal for the theory and Practice of Creative Writing. 31
July 2015. 4 pages. DOI: 1080/14790726.2015.1057162
“Feathering the Caw.” Omnibus poetry review of As if a Raven, by Yvonne Blumer, Thrum, by Natalie
Simpson, and The White Crow, by Christine Smart. Canadian Literature 223 (Winter 2014) c. 2015: 126-
127. https://canlit.ca/article/feathering-the-caw/
“Buzz.” Vallum 12.2 (2015): 56-59.
“Anne’s Wedding Photo,” “Piracy.” The Dalhousie Review 95.2 (2015): 217-220.
Reviews of Joe Beernick’s Nowhere Wild, Patti Grayson’s Ghost Most Foul, Allison Van Diepen’s Light of
Day, and Catherine Banner’s The Heart of War: The Last descendants Trilogy Book III, in Resource Links
21.1 (2015): 29, 35, 43, 28-29.
“The Gentleman Contractor in Vancouver.”The Literary Review of Canada 24.6 (2016): 17.
“Choose Your Ending.” Event 45.2 (2016): 49.
“The Personal is the Political.” Transverse Journal 15 (2016): 124-128. (and web)
“Space in [Ab]sence.” Omnibus poetry review of Juliane Okot bitetk’s 100 days, Nicole Marcotic’s
whelmed, and Sheryda warrener’s floating is everything. Canadian Literature, 228/229, 2016, pp. 230 -
231. https://canlit.ca/article/space-in-absence/
“Veterinarian Dr. Bondo.” Vallum vol. 14, issue 2, 2017, pp. 27-28.
“Crow,” “Francis Bacon’s,” “The Blind Bird Watcher,” “Don’t Bend Over,” “Dornen,” “Fun and Games,”
“What’s Left,” “Bindi,” “The Second coming,” “Intimates.” Ars Medica, vol. 13, issue 1 (2018), pp. 71 – 94. https://ars-medica.ca/index.php/journal/article/view/582
“Amaryllis Bulb: Invocation.” The Dalhousie Review, vol. 98, issue 1 (2018), p. 124.
“Augury amidst Aftermath.” Omnibus poetry review of Rhonda Ganz’ Frequent, small loads of laundry,
Clea Roberts’ Auguries, and Budge Wilson’s After Swissair. Canadian Literature, vol. 234, Autumn 2017,
Eclectic Mix, pp. 151 – 153. https://canlit.ca/article/augury-amidst-aftermath/
“Arraignment at a Kafkaesque University: a Calm and Deliberative Rant?” Transverse issue 17 [2018] ,
pp. 115-119.
“moody blues.” The Literary Review of Canada, Oct. 2018, p. 12.
“Blessing [in] Darkness.” Omnibus poetry review of Heidi Greco’s Flightpaths, Pamela Porter’s Defending
Darkness, and Jan Zwicky’s The Long Walk, Canadian Literature, vol. 235, Winter 2017, Concepts of
Vancouver: Poetics, Art, Media, pp. 149 – 150. https://canlit.ca/article/blessing-in-darkness/
“Snare,” “Family Fun,” “At the Exhibition: Myra Hindley’s Painting,” “Humbert’s Ghost Speaks,”
“Replicate,” “Mrs. Richard Schiller, alias Lolita,” “Snakes and Ladders,” “The Second Hand: Big Sister to
Small Sister.” Wilderness House Literary Journal, volume 12, issue 3. [Fall 2017], pdf. pages 1 to 24.
https://www.whlreview.com/no-12.3/poetry/CrystalHurdle.pdf
Excerpts from WhatWouldJaredDo? seven poems-- Dr. Doctor [welcome disaster], Emma [cake mix],
Tabloid [child labour], Butler [moth breath], Tabloid [rescue dog], Dr. Doctor [five stages], Emma [sunrise].
The Prairie Journal 2017 [Dec.] –12 pages equivalency
http://prairiejournal.org/poems.html
Excerpts from WhatWouldJaredDo? from The Prairie Journal featured in Alberta Unbound: The Best of
Alberta Magazines on the Alberta Magazines Publishers Association website.
http://albertamagazines.com/alberta-unbound/ July 2018
"Distaff Servitor." Arms Like Ladders: The Eloquent She. Ed. Katerina Fretwell. N. P.: The Feminist Caucus of the League of Canadian Poets, 2007. 60.
"Tied with Black Grosgrain Ribbon: Letters to the Insurance Adjuster." Body Breakdowns: Tales of Illness + Recovery. Ed. Janis Harper. Vancouver, BC: Anvil Press, 2007. 146-152.
"Little Old Lady Deconstructed," "The Little Old Ladies: a Chorus." Silver Boomers: A Collection of Prose and Poetry by and About Baby Boomers. Eds. Ginny Greene, et al. Abilene, Texas: Silver Boomer Books, 2008. 116-117, 155.
"Births and Deaths." Honoring Motherhood: Prayers, Ceremonies & Blessings. Ed. Lynn L. Caruso. Woodstock, Vermont: Skylight Paths Publishing, 2008. 160-161.
“Epiphany--Lure of the Greasy Forelock.” Epiphanies: moments in your writing life that change you forever. Ed. Anne Burke. Living Archives of the Feminist Caucus of the League of Canadian Poets. 2011. Toronto: League of Canadian Poets, 2012. 40.
“Elegy.” The Dialogue Continues: Tales from the Making of Capilano College. 2nd ed. Eds. Bill Schermbrucker and Crawford Kilian. North Vancouver: Capilano University Faculty Association, 2014. 288-290.
From “Ajar.” Make It True: Poetry from Cascadia. Ed. Paul Nelson, et al. Lantzville, BC: Leaf Press, 2015. 136-137.
“Sivvy: Furlough in Rousseau I,” “Sivvy: Furlough in Rousseau II,” “Sivvy: Furlough in DeChirico.” Like a Fat Gold Watch: Meditations on Sylvia Plath and Living, edited by Christine Hamm, Fat Gold Watch Press, 2017, pp. 14-17.
“Letters to the Insurance Adjuster.” Another Dysfunctional Cancer Poem Anthology, edited by Priscila Uppal and Meaghan Strimas. Mansfield P, 2018, pp. 186-190.
*Work is forthcoming in Bogg, Canadian Literature, Write, and The Menstrual: Radical Feminist Literary Magazine.