Poetry Shelf Breathing Room: Robert Sullivan

Rākaumatohi: E hoa

((((((((((High energy))))))))))))))))

How do I love you, my friends?
let me count the mountain’s ways,
the heightened plains that bend
up into snowy reaches, playing
on the mind out of sight to send
pillars of light, clouds, rains
on a grateful garden bed
pulling out rocks making lakes
with his tokotoko, with her cloaks sent
from our māra kai into our food basket
filled with sweetness and kōrero each
to each—we’re peaches, plums,
strawberries and yams, we’re
only the bumblebee’s hums 
aroha stumblefooting the air
in this flowering season.

Korekore Rawea (Low energy, be creative)

Q+A from a Shakti card.

Because korowai take
all the abilities
of their makers
they aren’t made
on hunches,
and the īnanga
(kōkopu, baby tuna)
rippling in pounamu
are active and best
with huge love
but I wasn’t ready
I lacked the insight
and went for a moon
launch when a go-cart
or a raft made
from recycled bottles
might have played
to my best abilities
plus I don’t have
a roof rack for a kayak
which is what I’d love
to do, go kayaking,
or hitch my bike
on my bike rack
and ride round
the Waitaki lakes
rather than 
moon shadows.

Oh, Shakti, I did
follow my hunch
but much better
to call beyond
the greenstone
on my chest
beyond this cloth
of knowing
that the veil
is going to lift
from the picnic
after all the games
of hide and seek,
the swings, seesaws
and slides
of birthdays
in the park.
Much better
to drink
the water.

Robert Sullivan
from Hopurangi | Songcatcher, Auckland University Press, 2024

Robert Sullivan is Aotearoa New Zealand’s 14th Poet Laureate. He belongs to Ngāpuhi (Ngāti Manu, Ngāti Hau / Ngāti Kaharau) and Kāi Tahu (Kāti Huirapa ki Puketeraki) iwi and is also of Irish descent. He has won many literary awards. His most recent books are Hopurangi / Songcatcher (AUP) which was shortlisted for the Mary and Peter Biggs Award at the 2025 Ockham Book Awards, Koe: An Aotearoa Ecopoetry Anthology coedited with Janet Newman (Otago University Press 2024) and a collection of essays coedited with Anna Jackson and Dougal McNeill, Te Whāriki: Reading Ten New Poets from Aotearoa (AUP 2025). Robert is Associate Professor in Creative Writing at Massey University. He lives in Ōamaru.

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 stillness wonder movement of a poem.

Poetry Shelf noticeboard: James Brown and Dinah Hawken launch

Join us to celebrate the arrival of two excellent new poetry collections: New Days for Old by James Brown and Peace & Quiet by Dinah Hawken. The books will be launched by Jenny Bornholdt.

Thursday 23 April, 6pm
Unity Books Wellington
All welcome!

James Brown’s New Days for Old is a delightful experiment in form.

Each scene in this book is like a 1-minute pop song: its depths are at first easy to miss. But as the story proceeds, the grand scheme of things hoves into view: we are born, we crawl and then are carried away, and everything is a-shimmer, even the disappointments

‘How does James Brown do it? Every page in this book is my favourite.’ —Bill Manhire

What use is poetry in times of ecological and political turbulence? Dinah Hawken’s Peace and Quiet grapples with this question, invoking both human voices and the voices — ‘the silt and the slash’ — of the natural world.

Powerful and illuminating, these poems show that peace, gentleness and reflection are a form of resistance.

‘This is poetry that digs deeply into existence, life and death, peace ahead of war, the power of silence and the power of the spoken.’ —Paula Green 

Poetry Shelf celebrates the Ockham NZ Book Awards poetry shortlist: Sophie van Waardenberg

No Good, Sophie van Waardenberg
Auckland University Press, 2025

The word I write in my notebook in my latest reading is bridge, the way poems become a bridge, establish vital bridges. Think sweet and sour crossings, fluid and awkward, here and there, good and not good. Not as a restrictive dichotomy but as a series of movements, like music, like the way personal experience resists pigeon holes. Traversing the myriad bridges in Sophie’s sublime collection makes me both think and feel the world. Yes I am thinking and feeling a version of her world, but also a version of my world. And this moves me.

Paula Green, from Poetry Shelf review

To celebrate placement on The Ockham NZ Book Awards poetry shortlist, I invited the four poets to choose some favourite things. Fourthly, Sophie van Waardenberg.

Sophie van Waardenberg
chooses favourites

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

my bed! ideally with a cat on it and a pile of books nearby

the park near my house where I do my boring walks at sunrise & sunset

Three sets of three

Three favourite words in your poetry toolkit
You, I, whatever.

Three things that matter to you when you read and write poems
A question being asked; a rhythm; the alive and weird and particular voice of a human being.

Three poets who have inspired you
Frank O’Hara, Mary Ruefle, Emily Berry.

One question

Why or how does your poetry book matter to you?

I only really have selfish reasons: because it’s my first book, it’s proof for myself that I can draw a line under something and call it finished despite its imperfections. It’s also a relief that it exists, because it means I never have to write my first book again.

One poem

Sticky

A girl can have a piece of everything
as a treat. A girl can call her mother
to ask for love. A girl will superglue
her medicine together. A girl shovels
strawberries into her mouth for juice.
The sugar is enough to fill the hour.
A girl would like to ask for other fruit.
The other fruit falls thickly from the clouds.
A girl is filth and bright. A girl is born
out of comparison. A girl can sing or can’t.
A girl is held inside a duck’s bill, weighed
against a slice of bread for softness.
What flour is a girl made of? Wheat or corn?
How can a girl get clean again?

Sophie van Waardenberg

Sophie van Waardenberg is a writer from Tāmaki Makaurau. She holds an MFA from Syracuse University where she was editor-in-chief of Salt Hill Journal. Her first chapbook, ‘does a potato have a heart?’, was published in AUP New Poets 5 (2019). Her poems about eating carbohydrates and kissing girls can be found in Cordite, Sweet Mammalian, The Spinoff and Best New Zealand Poems.

Listen to Sophie read two poems on Poetry Shelf: ‘Self-Portrait as Adolescent Covered in Flour’, ‘Hymn to the Insomniac in Fool’s Spring’

Sophie chooses a poem

Auckland University Press page

Poetry Shelf Playing Favourites: Frankie McMillan picks Kerrin P Sharpe

blue

your blue wooden house
still nestles in Niaqornat
                        Johanna

the washing line once
a bunting of towels and nappies
                        stands empty
the breathy songs of narwhals
dried by the wind

that last night in the front room
Johanna four tall candles
                        held stillness
around you an orchestra
of faith in light

and when morning arrived
with the sledge you were blessed
                        with herbs and moss
the whole village behind you
all the way to Chapel

do you remember saying
the ice would never change?
                        these days
it’s too thick for boats
too thin for sledges

some hunters shoot their dogs
unmended nets sleep on the beach
                        what happened
to elbow grease Johanna?
everyone’s on the internet

Kerrin P  Sharpe 
from Hoof, Te Herenga Waka Press, XXXX

This is one of my favourite Kerrin Sharpe poems. At first glance the elegy honours and laments an old woman Johanna, while also reflecting on the changes climate crisis has brought to her remote village in Greenland. Then the title, ‘blue’ with its associations of feeling down or depressed reflects on the high incidence of mental health related to the abandonment of cultural practices in the region. In the dark days of winter, instead of coming together in the evenings, ‘ Everyone’s on the internet.’ ‘ So many stay indoors/ forgetting/who they are.’

The traditional farewell to Johanna is conveyed in ten lines with a close up view … ‘four still candles held stillness /around you/ to the wide angle view of Johanna on the sled ‘ the whole village behind you/all the way to the Chapel.’ As with all Kerrin’s poems there is an astonishing agility and lightness of touch to the imagery.  The apt use of synesthetic lines,  ‘the breathy songs of narwhals/ dried by the wind.’ is another characteristic of her work that I admire. 

There is a power in the unanswered questions posed throughout but also a sense that the poet herself is baffled by the enormity of the environmental degradation.

‘Waves nibble away the cliffs.
What if the ice left
and never returned,
what then, Johanna?’

The shape of the stanzas, with their indented lines denote a kind of falling and for me, this juxtaposition of falling and grace or terror and beauty epitomize our extraordinary rich and fragile world.

Frankie McMillan

Frankie McMillan is an award winning poet and writer of short fiction. In 2019 her book, The Father of Octopus Wrestling, and other small stories(Canterbury University Press) was shortlisted for the NZSA Heritage Award and listed by Spinoff as one of the ten best fiction books of 2019. Her poetry has been selected for Ōrongohu  /Best New Zealand Poems 2012, 2015 and 2022, Landfall, Takahe and in international journals including Cincinnati Review, Shenandoah and Atlanta Review.   Her collection, Eddie Sparkle’s Bridal Taxi (CUP) was launched, October, 2025.

Kerrin P. Sharpe is the author of five poetry collections, most recently Hoof (2023) and Louder (2018). Her poems have appeared in local and international literary journals including Landfall, Turbine | Kapohau, Poetry Aotearoa Yearbook, POETRY (US), Blackbox Manifold, PN Review and Stand. Her work has been anthologised in Best New Zealand Poems six times, the anthology Best of Best New Zealand Poems, Oxford Poets 2013, 150 Essential New Zealand Poems and A Game of Two Halves: The Best of Sport 2005–2019. In 2021 she held a writing residency at the Michael King Writers Centre.

 

Poetry Shelf noticeboard: Michael King Australian Residency

The Michael King Writers Centre in association with Varuna, The National Writers’ House in Katoomba, NSW, Australia is pleased to announce for the fifth time, a residency in Australia for New Zealand writers.  
This three week residency is open to mid-career or established writers who have had a book published in the last two years.
The writer awarded the residency will receive return economy airfares to Sydney, accommodation with all meals included, plus the opportunity to present their work at the Blue Mountains Writers’ festival.
 
Applications close on Monday 27 April and the selection is expected to be announced in late May.

This programme is a partnership between the Michael King Writers Centre, Varuna, The National Writers’ House of Australia and the Blue Mountains Writers’ Festival, Katoomba.

Details here

Poetry Shelf Playing Favourites: Cilla McQueen picks ‘Quark Dance’

Quark Dance

here come the colours
to settle on our lips and eyes
and rainbow lighting all the edges
the boundaries are unstable
trust love not logic
light falls
never the same way twice
keep awake
jump out into the never look back
dream hair ribbons unfurling
I can if you can too
barefoot balance and free fall
without scary death in our mouths
just plain delight
learning to nudge the wind
dance falling exploding symmetry
stretching the space
pulse slow arm elbow up
whip spine twist
thigh knee toe out
the current passes
nowadays science is pure poetry
all the particles bounce and decay
sweetly and sure as seeds
and quarks come in such colours and flavours
as beauty charm and strangeness
it’s all so weird and simple
the world’s made up of tiny little energetic
multicoloured irrational jellybeans
so dance
quark dance

Cilla McQueen
From Anti Gravity (McIndoe 1984), re-published in Poeta (2018, OUP)

‘Quark Dance’: it was unusual to write about quantum physics in 1984, but I did it anyway in this poem from Anti Gravity which delights unscientifically in the remarkable behaviours of elementary particles.
Cilla McQueen


Cilla McQueen MNZM is a poet, teacher and artist, and a three-time winner of the New Zealand Book Award for Poetry. She received an honorary doctorate in literature from the University of Otago in 2008 and was New Zealand Poet Laureate from 2009 to 2011. In 2010 she received the Prime Minister’s Award for Literary Achievement (Poetry). In 2020 she was appointed a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services as a poet. Cilla lives in Bluff, at the southern tip of New Zealand’s South Island.

Otago University Press page

Playing Favourites is a series where poets pick a favourite poem of their own or by another nz poet.

Poetry Shelf noticeboard: Ariana Tikao book launch

Kia ora koutou, booklovers!

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

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.

Born and raised in Ōtautahi Christchurch, Tikao left the city after the devastating earthquakes of 2010 and 2011. In 2023 she was awarded the Ursula Bethell Residency at the University of Canterbury and returned to live in a place that was both deeply familiar and astonishingly new. Written largely during this period, Pepeha Portal is shaped by stories embedded in the landscape – many long erased by colonialism and only recently exposed by cultural, as much as geological, shifts.

Responding to suburban landscapes and tīpuna places, personal memory and ancestral voice, Pepeha Portal considers how language, whakapapa and whenua act as portals to belonging.

All welcome, this is a free event. Refreshments provided. Please send in your RSVP.

Poetry Shelf Breathing Room: Claire Beynon

Grapefruit

He has two wishes for his sixth
birthday: a pocket of ruby grapefruit
and a citrus knife
with a bend in it.

It is the Fast of Ramadhan — the twenty-eighth day
in — and the weather shows no consideration.
Flies and an irreverent heat
nudge Mr Sahlie the fruit seller
and his cart horse up the street.

The children are waiting. They know
he will come. He’ll spoil them
with a fistful of pomegranate, a slice of ice
green melon. Upside down they wait
dangling limbs and rinds of chatter
from the purple crown of a jacaranda
tree. They swing from a sandpit sky
scuffed toes bare, swishing through a thick mirage
of air. Up at the gate, in the post-box shade
beach buckets brim with the horse’s drink.

Ramadhan. And today is the boy’s
sixth birthday. He drops to the ground
with a ripe fruit sound, runs
pelter, pelter down the street.
There’s a horse, a cart and an old man
to meet.

And of course he’s remembered. He whistles
and grins, heaves the grapefruit down.
Next week, they agree, when the Fast
is complete, they’ll sit on the pavement
enjoy a pink feast.

“Why, Mr Sahlie?” I hear my boy speak.
“Why do they smell so wet
and deep?”

Claire Beynon
from Open Book: Poetry & Images, Steele Roberts, 2007

Claire Beynon is an artist and writer living in Ōtepoti Dunedin. Her poetry, flash fiction and short stories have been widely pub-lished and anthologised in Aotearoa and abroad. She has been a runner-up in the Sunday Star Times Short Story Competition and in 2002 was the winner of the NZ Poetry Society’s International Poetry award. In 2021 her poem ‘Today’s Sky’ was awarded the Takahē Monica Taylor Poetry Prize.  Claire combines the contemplative rhythms of writing and art-making with a range of interdisciplinary collaborations. Two summer research seasons in Antarctica continue to inform her work. Her most recent collection is For when words fail us: a small book of changes, The Cuba Press, 2024. Website

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 stillness wonder movement of a poem.

Poetry Shelf Monday Poem: ‘An Irregular Family Villanelle: Cornwall, August 2025’ by Harry Ricketts

An Irregular Family Villanelle: Cornwall, August 2025

All thoughts can be bent like a spoon,
even this sunny, wave-splashy afternoon.
Lost pasts twist and shout in the wind.

The sea morphs green to blue.
‘You must catch the wave; the wave won’t catch you.’
All thoughts can be bent like a spoon.

Francis and Maxime hurl howlers at the sky;
Jamie makes a wicked cottage pie.
Lost pasts twist and shout in the wind.

Each lane unspools its herring-bone stone charm.
Tommy with a child on either arm.
All thoughts can be bent like a spoon.

Jessie suspends the how and when;
Arya and Delfi are ‘president’ again.
Lost pasts twist and shout in the wind.

The sea morphs green to blue.
My mother lived here once; so, too, did you.
All thoughts can be bent like a spoon.
Lost pasts twist and shout in the wind.

Harry Ricketts

Harry Ricketts has published thirty-five books, most recently First Things: A Memoir and  (co-written with David Kynaston) Richie Benaud’s Blue Suede Shoes: The Story of an Ashes Classic (both 2024) and his thirteenth poetry collection, Bonfires on the Ice (2025). He lives in Wellington Te Whanganui-a-Tara, loves cricket and coffee, and teaches a creative non-fiction course at the International Institute of Modern Letters at Te Herenga Waka Victoria University of Wellington.