The Poetry Shelf Breathing Room: Magnetic South by Sue Wootton

Magnetic South

You are my magnetic south.
I fall to you true.

I am the eel, the gull,
the silvery fish,
returning and returning.

Yours is the tide I swim to.

Sue Wootton
From Magnetic South, Steele Roberts, 2008

Sue Wootton’s most recent poetry collection is The Yield (Otago University Press, 2017), which was a finalist in the 2018 Ockham New Zealand book awards. She has held the Robert Burns Fellowship, the NZSA Beatson Fellowship and the Katherine Mansfield Menton Fellowship. In 2025 she was awarded the Kathleen Grattan Prize for a Sequence of Poems, for a suite of sonnets called ‘Holding Patterns: Seven songs of pots, jars, bowls and vases’. Sue lives in Ōtepoti Dunedin, and is the publisher at Otago University Press. The poem ‘Magnetic South’ is from her 2008 collection of the same name, published by Steele Roberts.

The Poetry Shelf Breathing Room: A place to enter and pause and take a long slow breath and then another, as you absorb the beauty movement joy wonder stillness of a poem.

Poetry Shelf noticeboard: Wordsoup Open mic poetry with Airini Beautrais

Nau mai haere mai ki Wordsoup!
26 March 7pm


A poetry and spoken word open mic night held every third Thursday of the month at Porridge Watson.
Share your words with a friendly and supportive audience and listen to what others have to say. All welcome, from first-timers to seasoned performers.
Performers get a token for one free drink.
MCs Jessica Allan and Airini Beautrais

Poetry Shelf Playing Favourites: Kay McKenzie Cooke chooses two Vincent O’Sullivan poems

Sunday night, Port Chalmers

Willie Nelson singing, ‘Why not take all of me.’
Eleven p.m., almost. A southerly predicted.
I’ll wake about three, if I’m lucky,
to hear the cold front battering in,
flaring the wall a few inches from where
I lie, hearing the constant drive
of one thing towards another: as earlier
this week, one o’clock church bells ringing,
and an old man at home with a small green bell
as though ringing for tea, because an albatross,
the first of the royal albatrosses, has majestied
in at the Heads for the breeding season:
one, so we’re told, who may have ridden
and skimmed the oceans twelve months
without touching down. Bells have rung for so much
less. Riding the calm and the storm and the gift
of high persistence, like weather itself, to survive.
I hope I wake at three to hear life barrelling in.

Vincent O’Sullivan
from Still Is, Te Herenga Waka University Press, 2024

Vincent Sullivan’s poem ‘Sunday night, Port Chalmers’ is the penultimate poem in his last collection, Still Is. The poem appears understated, almost homely, opening as it does with a line from one of Country singer Willie Nelson’s songs that you imagine as being played on the radio as he writes. It is a poem that places us in the poet’s home, on a Sunday night, as he snatches a moment in time. It even tells us what time Sunday night. It is a poem recording at surface level. Or so it seems. However, things slowly emerge from a deeper level to prove how much Vincent O’Sullivan was the epitome of the everyman; capable of holding his own whether in the echelons of higher learning, or conversing on a bus. Scattered throughout this poem, as indeed throughout all his poetry, are idiosyncratic O’Sullivan turns of phrase. For example, describing the ability of an albatross’s year-long journey of constant flight as a ‘gift of high persistence’.
We gather that there is something vital and important is to be found among these conversational musings, written down at the end of a day by a man thinking ahead to that night’s sleep; a sleep sure to be interrupted by waking up ‘about three, if I’m lucky, / to hear the cold front battering in, / flaring the wall a few inches from where / I lie, hearing the constant drive / of one thing towards another.’ And if we look hard enough, we are rewarded as we discover that dance between what verges on the insubstantial nature of an ordinary specific, and a deeper, universal truth

The familiarity of the scene of a man getting ready for bed, preparing to face with some anticipation the sound of a predicted southerly’s brunt, is interlaced with the wonder and majesty of the recent (‘earlier this week’) return of some Royal Albatrosses to the colony at Taiaroa Head, not far from his home (as the albatross flies) in Port Chalmers.

There is a hidden humour—that 3.00 a.m. interruption that is so familiar to those of us of a certain age, Vincent turns into something to celebrate, rather than dread.

The mention of what time it is, ‘Eleven p.m., almost’ as well as the title of the poem itself, hints at this poem being about time. But the dogged optimism of the final line points to the poet actually addressing life itself. ‘I hope I wake at three to hear life barrelling in.’ The final line could well co-join with the poem’s introductory line about Willie Nelson singing, ‘Why not take all of me.’
When looked at properly, this deceptively light poem wields a heft worthy of any southerly’s cold front. It sets in amber a moment, a mood, time, sleep, seasons, weather. The return flight of the albatross. Of celebration in the middle of life.
It speaks of the ordinary routines of a man who, sadly, is no longer with us. A man who took great care over what was important and who had the ability to discern what was worthy of notice. It says that sometimes what is majestical is to be celebrated with ‘church bells’ as well as ‘an old man at home with a small green bell / as though ringing for tea.’

We sure do miss people when they are no longer around and Ōtepoti misses Vincent O’Sullivan. For a good ten years and until his death he graced us with his presence here, connecting and engaging with those of us in this southern city’s writing community. He went out of his way to support, befriend and encourage. Before he and Helen moved out to Port, I was lucky enough to be something of a neighbour. But after they moved, it meant I no longer came across Vincent in the neighbourhood—which was actually mainly at the bus stop. We’d share a seat as the bus rolled into town and we’d chat about ordinary stuff; family, grandchildren, travel. And writing. He’d ask what I was working on and tell me what he was currently doing—which was usually going to the library to research. The McNab Room was great for writing in, he reckoned. Quiet. He recommended it as somewhere to write.

I cherished his kind regard and the down to earth conversations we had, always laced with dry humour in wry, erudite comments and thoughts. I hold especially dear one particular encouragement of his which more or less went along the lines of, ’Don’t worry about cookie-cutter, current trends and modern styles. You have your own story which has its own worth.’ I told him that meant a lot. I wasn’t kidding, it did mean a lot. To this day, this considered advice continues to arm me with confidence.

I like bells. I even collect them. Kind of. Not in a hoarder way. My Cockney great-grandfather was born within the sound of Bow Bells. My childhood nickname was Kaybells. Sunday night, Port Chalmers mentions bells three times. I also enjoy Country music – a product of my Southland upbringing and having a father who could sing C&W as good as accomplished singers on the radio – yodelling included. He just preferred to keep this ability close to home.

Personal points of interest in a poem tend to embellish that poem, making it even more precious. For many reasons, not just the mention of bells or Willie Nelson, this poem of Vincent’ O’Sullivan’s is one such poem for me. ‘Bells have rung for so much / less. Riding the calm and the storm.’

Kay McKenzie Cooke

Nowhere further from Belgium

My grandmother used to say
‘Just do your best now’
when a drawing came out smudgy,
a list of words for spelling
crossed out here and there.

I thought of that this morning
when the sea at Orepuki
banged like a hundred bibles
angrily shut, a place
no more this morning

than its few dead shops, a pub,
a maimed main street, a cemetery
on a dirt road and a white
blunt column among local
graves; a boy it remembers,

someone’s boy in his early
twenties, dead somewhere
in Belgium, where bits
of the distant boy were gathered,
one hopes, by mates.

One thinks of him here, ‘signed up’,
his spruce regimental number
in the street where so much happened,
a uniform doing wonders
whatever the wind, the sea,

the sand graining the text
on the marble plinth, his telling
the girls, ‘Yeah try to do
my best’, his cobbers’ pissed
shiyacking, ‘Glamorous bugger!’

Vincent O’Sullivan
from Us, Then, Te Herenga Waka University Press, 2013

I also wanted to talk to Vincent’s poem ‘Nowhere further from Belguim’ from his collection Us, Then. It is special to me because it is a poem placed squarely in the heart of my tūrakawaewae—the small town of Orepuki in Murihiku Southland.
Without even trying, I can spool back to the past and to myself as a child running down a crunchy gravel road, down the un-maimed main street, dropping into one of the shops which at that time was very much alive with local characters and the stuff of life.

I can also place myself there as an adult, with my whānau, visiting the graves of both my maternal and paternal ancestors; my tīpuna; visiting the grave of my maternal great-grandmother, who lost not one, but two sons to the First World War.

I can also place Vincent there, visiting Orepuki cemetery one day, reading the marble plinth, ‘sand graining the text’ and hearing the sea as it ‘banged like a hundred bibles / angrily shut’.
I can’t actually recall doing so, but I like to think that on one of our conversations on the bus into town, I did remember to tell him just how much this poem meant to me.

Kay McKenzie Cooke

Born in Auckland in 1937, Vincent O’Sullivan was one of New Zealand’s leading writers, acclaimed for his poetry, plays, short stories, and novels, which include Let the River Stand, Believers to the Bright Coast, and the Ockham-shortlisted All This By Chance. He was joint editor with Margaret Scott of the internationally acclaimed five-volume Letters of Katherine Mansfield, edited a number of major anthologies, and was the author of widely praised biographies of John Mulgan and Ralph Hotere. He taught at Waikato University and Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of Wellington, and was the New Zealand Poet Laureate for 2013–2015. In 2000, Vincent was made a Distinguished Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit, and in 2021 he was redesignated as a Knight Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit. He died in April 2024.

Kay McKenzie Cooke (Waitaha, Kāti Māmoe, Kāi Tahu) lives in Ōtepoti Dunedin. She continues to hold a deep connection to Murihiku Southland, the province where she was brought up. She has recently become a Trustee for Arts Murihiku. She is the author of four poetry collections and three novels. These days she’s flat tack writing stuff for a memoir (for whānau) as well working on her fifth poetry collection and sporadically tackling a fourth novel. As well there are the regular updates to her blog 11th Letter In on her website.

Poetry Shelf noticeboard: Ariana Tikao book launch

Ariana Tikao, Scorpio Books and Otago University Press warmly welcome you to the launch of Pepeha Portal.

Pepeha Portal is the keenly anticipated debut poetry collection from New Zealand Arts Laureate Ariana Tikao. Rooted in Kāi Tahu identity, the collection chronicles a homecoming and offers a moving account of memory, place and connection.

Arrive at 5:30pm for a 6pm start

Thursday 16 April 2026

Scorpio Books

120 Hereford Street, Christchurch Central City, Ōtautahi | Christchurch

RSVP: https://tinyurl.com/ScorpioBooksRSVP

All welcome, this is a free event. Refreshments provided.

Poetry Shelf review: What to Wear by Jenny Bornholdt

What to Wear, Jenny Bornholdt
Te Herenga Waka University Press, 2026

A woman stilled by light
then folded
into darkness.
Still, though, she’s there
by the window, still there
in the room.

Jenny Bornholdt
from ‘Ada in the Room’

What an absolute treat to lose and find myself within the paths and slipstreams of Jenny Bornholdt’s new writing. This book is a visual haunting, a soundtrack of grief, loss, illness, love, wonder. Enter this collection, and enter a poetic terrain that is both gloriously spare and captivatingly rich.

Poetry can do this. Poetry can offer subtlety within richness, and then in a sweet poetry swivel, offer richness within subtlety.

I found myself musing on the art of dressmaking – an irony when the cover and the title of the book signal clothing (more on this later). I got musing on the way slivers of life are hiding within the seams of the poems, in the nuance of a line, in the folds of a metaphor. Musing on the way tiny arrivals are signposts in the wide expanse of daily living, whether a word mantra repeated during an MRI, or how a mountain’s death zone brushes against the death zone in a cancer ward, or the throwing away of a mother’s maps, or the wearing of socks when days are numbered, or the drawing-breath sound of trees after rain.

‘What to wear’ is the final line in the final poem, ‘Illness’. Not a question, but a member of the checklist of daily choices. The poem — so heart-affecting when the woman we read of is “up, but just, just / hanging on” — returns me to the terrific cover image (photograph by Deborah Smith). The hanging shirt. Hanging in space. Hanging in the great unknown. And in my madcap musings, I am wondering if, in one or more senses, I am wearing the poems, these poems so exquisitely crafted, with piquant detail, with an under-and-overlay of personal experience, with a shimmering bridge between what is and what is not, between what is spoken and what is framed in silence. What is fascinating fable and surprising fiction. Ah. What to read in the seams? I am losing and finding the way a poem hangs in both the dark and light.

Sometimes I muse that what we bring to a poetry collection makes an electric and eclectic difference. Maybe that is why the book has sparked for me on many levels. Both personally and on how we might write a poem.

I read and love ‘Ada in the Room’. It’s an exquisite visual haunting, a poem that catches you as a sublime painting might, and then I discover the poem is a response to an actual painting, ‘Interior, Sunlight on the Floor’ in the Tate Gallery in London. Plus it has a fascinating anecdote. An owner had folded the painting so the artist’s wife Ada was no longer visible! But it is the poem that holds me. I am transported to the moment on the kitchen chair when I too watch the light streak the floor, and knowing I get folded into light and dark across the course of every single day.

Oh the joy of poems as miniatures to fold and unfold.

When I slow down to an extended reading pause, I am reminded of reading Bill Manhire’s new collection, Lyrical Ballads THWUP, 2026). How poetry can hint and whisper, sing and imagine, find humour and enigma, whether in everyday starting points or imagined flight, in both the strange and the unexpected. How the everyday prompts vital rewards for mind heart imagination senses. I loved the idea of listening to Bill read Lyrical Ballads from start to finish, and now I want Jenny to do the same.

Poetry, as my personalised review underlines, can offer delight along with self-nourishment. In What to Wear, the amalgam of reading delight and nourishment is there in broken things, sitting on the phone, the poem with the hole in it (ah what poem doesn’t have a hole in it), and the members of an extended family ‘declining like nouns’. I have had startle jabs of feeling, points of recognition, prolonged engagements with the chemistry of words. Take ‘Poem with a hole in it’. It juxtaposes word lists with stanzas. The laying of a path overlays/underlays the laying of a poem. The word lists epitomise how Jenny’s poems open out wider from their immediately visible pavings.

What to Wear is still on the table and I want to prolong my day in its nooks and crannies and spaces, in this magical poetry collection that folds and gently moves me to wonder and ache and absorb.

Plum

Why wear socks
when your days
are numbered.

Like plums falling
from trees, frequent
as minutes

Jenny Bornoldt

Jenny Bornholdt has published over a dozen books of poems, including Lost and Somewhere Else (2019), Selected Poems (2016) and The Rocky Shore (winner of the Montana New Zealand Book Award for Poetry, 2009). She has edited a number of anthologies, including Short Poems of New Zealand (2018), and has worked on numerous book and art projects with artists including Annemarie Hope-Cross, Pip Culbert, Mary McFarlane, Noel McKenna, Mari Mahr, Brendan O’Brien and Gregory O’Brien. In 2018 she was the co-recipient, with Gregory O’Brien, of the Henderson Arts Trust Residency and spent 12 months in Alexandra, Central Otago. She was New Zealand’s poet laureate in 2005–2007, and in the 2014 New Year Honours she was appointed a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services as a poet.

Te Herenga Waka University Press page

Poetry Shelf Monday Poem: Counting by Karlo Mila

Counting

This morning, 
I am not going to add up 
how many deaths over the ditch,
and compare,
to how many deaths over there.

Nor, will I post about the human arithmetic
of some lives appearing
to matter more
#all #black #jewish #palestinian

My algorithm
is different 
to your algorithm.

And in a calculated way, 
we are divided
further.

We find ourselves here.

Trolls.

Scrolling past the body bags of dead children.

And, with our soft typing fingers,
arguing about what it all means.

Karlo Mila

Dr Karlo Mila, of Tongan and Pākehā descent with ancestral connections to Samoa, is an award-winning poet, writer, mother, activist and researcher.  She is the author of three books of poetry, including Dream Fish Floating (2005) which won the Jessie MacKay Best First Book of Poetry at the 2006 Montana New Zealand Book Awards. Her most recent book, Goddess Muscle, was released by Huia Publishers in 2020. Career highlights include representing Tonga at the 2012 Cultural Olympiad event Poetry Parnassus Festival in London, a Fulbright Creative Writing Residency in Hawai’i and reading poetry at the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting Peoples Forum in 2018.

Poetry Shelf celebrates the Ockham NZ Book Awards Poetry Shortlist: Nafanua Purcell Kersel picks some favourite things

Black Sugarcane, Nafanua Purcell Kersel
Te Herenga Waka University Press, 2025

“Let me say this. There is no shortage of poetry books published in Aotearoa this year to love, to be enthralled and astonished by. We need this. We need these reading pathways. Sometimes I love a poetry book so much I transcend the everyday scene of reading (yes those bush tūī singing and the kererū fast-swooping) to a zone where I am beyond words. It is when reading is both nourishment and restoration, miracle and epiphany . . . and that is what I get with this book.”

Paula Green, Poetry Shelf, 2025

To celebrate placement on The Ockham NZ Book Awards poetry shortlist, I invited the four poets to choose some favourite things. Second up Nafanua Purcell Kersel.

Nafanua Purcell Kersel chooses favourites

Four photos
(a favourite object, place, book cover, album)

A favourite thing is a seat with a view

A favourite place is the ‘blue corner’, our family coffee spot on my Mum and Dad’s front porch in Sāmoa.

Current favourite poetry book is Hungus by Amber Esau, one of the smartest, slickest poets in Aotearoa

Fave album: All the xennial girlies know

Three sets of three

Three favourite words in your poetry toolkit

A/a – small, sharp/round and very useful.
Place – I’ve been learning to see each poem as a place which helps me nest in and focus.
Mana – I try to ask myself, where does the mana sit?

Three things that matter to you when you read and write poems (just a sentence for each)

Rhythm: how does it sound and flow, what’s the pace and where can these be interrupted?
Structure and shape: concentric patterns of structure and shape in a line, stanza, poem and collection.
Simplicity: As much as possible (unless it’s impossible) I try to use plain language, easy or interesting shapes, blank spaces. 

Three poets who have inspired you

Tusiata Avia
Amber Esau
M. NourbeSe Philip

One question:  Why or how does your poetry book matter to you?

It mattered to me to have something to pass on to my children, something they could hold with our family names and stories in it. 

One poem 

Family video call
15 March 2019

On screen our faces are
like clay, about to crack.

We listen for Dad
to splinter the distance between us—

tatou tatalo,
let us pray for those poor families
in Christchurch,
with their loved ones taken.

We must stay aware,
keep safe
and never forget.

We had felt almost safe before this,
thought it was okay to be loud with our brown selves

thought we were free,
but we had only forgotten

that blackbirding and dawn raids
were hatchets roughly buried

and for decades we had let
tiny red flags sneak past us,

let our guards
slip off to sleep.

Now we are reminded
that we are minor.

A migrant shadow follows me to bed,
slips in heavy beside me

steals my comfort
warmth
dreams
prayers

Nafanua Purcell Kersel

Nafanua Purcell Kersel (Satupa‘itea, Faleālupo, Aleipata, Tuaefu) is a writer, poet and performer who was born in Sāmoa and raised in Te-Whanganui-a-Tara, Aotearoa. Her poetry has been widely published. She has an MA from the IIML at Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of Wellington and won the 2022 Biggs Family Prize in Poetry for Black Sugarcane, her first book. She lives in Te Matau-a-Māui Hawke’s Bay.

Te Herenga Waka University Press page

Listen to Nafanua read here

Poetry Shelf review