derek beaulieu Author of four books of poetry and two volumes of conceptual fiction, derek beaulieu's work is consistently praised as some of the most radical and challenging contemporary Canadian writing. beaulieu's fractal economies (Talonbooks, 2006) includes a cogent and widely-discussed argument for poetry which works beyond conventional meaning-making, pushing the boundaries of syntax into graphic design, gesture and collaboration.
It is fitting that in How to Write beaulieu makes manifest a very old idea, one that concerns Northrop Frye in his essay Canada and Its Poetry (1943): Originality is largely a matter of returning to origins. Appearing new, How to Write suggests, is about new ways of discovering, and stealing from, those origins. --The Bull Calf