Life and Death in the Valley of the Sagebrush Mariposa Lily

Author(s): Ehor Boyanowsky

Edition: 1

Copyright: 2024

Pages: 80

Choose Your Format

Ebook

$8.00

ISBN 9798385129928

Details Electronic Delivery EBOOK 365 days

From his vantage point at Nighthawk Ranch overlooking its infinitely fecund mother, the Thompson River, Ehor Boyanowsky embraces the people, plants and wildlife she nurtures to create a literary universe of experience both thrilling in discovery and dangerous, even deadly, if encountered haphazardly. The poems produced range from formal verse to experiments with emerging technology to weave a legacy of life and myth in the only true desert in Canada. 

 

Ehor Boyanowsky

Ehor Boyanowsky helped found the School of Criminology at Simon Fraser University, co-founded the Canadian Constitutional Foundation, served as president of the SFU Faculty Association, and twice as president of The Confederation of Faculty Associations of BC, as well as The Steelhead Society of BC, positions reflecting his major commitment to universities as founts of knowledge, to civil rights in Canada and to wild river and wild fish conservation. He now lives in the Thompson River Valley with his wife, Cristina Martini, his English setters and two cats at Nighthawk Ranch now a wildlife preserve.

From his vantage point at Nighthawk Ranch overlooking its infinitely fecund mother, the Thompson River, Ehor Boyanowsky embraces the people, plants and wildlife she nurtures to create a literary universe of experience both thrilling in discovery and dangerous, even deadly, if encountered haphazardly. The poems produced range from formal verse to experiments with emerging technology to weave a legacy of life and myth in the only true desert in Canada. 

 

Ehor Boyanowsky

Ehor Boyanowsky helped found the School of Criminology at Simon Fraser University, co-founded the Canadian Constitutional Foundation, served as president of the SFU Faculty Association, and twice as president of The Confederation of Faculty Associations of BC, as well as The Steelhead Society of BC, positions reflecting his major commitment to universities as founts of knowledge, to civil rights in Canada and to wild river and wild fish conservation. He now lives in the Thompson River Valley with his wife, Cristina Martini, his English setters and two cats at Nighthawk Ranch now a wildlife preserve.