Poetry Shelf reviews 2025: Bonfires on the Ice by Harry Ricketts

Bonfires on the Ice, Harry Ricketts
Te Herenga Waka University Press, 2025

Harry Rickett’s poetry collection delivers multiple heart loops, beginning with a poem entitled ‘Happiness’, travelling though terrains of grief and loss, and then reaching sparks of hope, with the grief bonfires and the grief ice easing, just a little, just a very little. Happiness, as the poem indicates, is illusory: “we cling to the thing with wings” and “It’s no potato you can grow”. The poetry is deeply personal: love and death is personal, the world is personal, politics is personal. I am feeling this book to the edge and depth of what matters, to the edge and depth of being alive, to the edge and depth of not being alive, being present and human and humane. I am recognising the difficulty of writing when happiness and equilibrium is in jeopardy. And how poetry can affect us so much.

The first poems are dedicated to friends no longer here, with each poem offering a savoured memory, a phrase, a place, a miniature portrait of dear friend (especially Lauris Edmond). In ‘Aro St Again’, a poem for Juliet, for me, the final lines resonate throughout the collection: “You paused, smiled, said / quite distinctly: ‘Aroha and ambiguity.'” This bloodline of writing, this love, these smudged edges of life and living. This aroha, this ambiguity.

How to write within the throb of grief and loss? What to hold close, what to let go? The poem, ‘Tangle’, strikes a chord. I am reading tributes to dear friends but I am also reading how the tangle of life, and I infer grief, might be reflected in the tangle of a poem, in an acute writing-life-writing tangle:

The past’s shifting scalene triangles
tease us to adjust their angles,
though geometry won’t put it right.

Harry gets me thinking about the poet as architect or builder in his couplet, ‘Poetic Architecture’, a poem that likens poems to rooms: “some poets prefer walls and a door, others open plan.” I am musing on the process of writing – how we may have a sense of walls and doors from the outset, and how we might also (or instead) write and read within a form of open plan. ‘Down There on a Visit’, a Rakiura poem penned for Belinda instead of a valentine, where the depiction of a shared experience of place becomes a tender gift, gets me musing even deeper. On the walls and windows and open expanse of writing.

If this is poetry as a series of rooms, with windows and doors opening onto and out of grief, onto and out of living, then both the exterior and internal views are paramount. Take the room where the poet is teacher, with the students sidetracking diverting moving into and beyond literature. I am back there in the heart loop, catching up on the ancient mariner, or listening to the lesson in “Another Footnote to Larkin”:

But if we hand the misery on
from self to others every day,
there’s this to say (Larkin again):
we should also be kind while we may.

The poetry draws me again and again into that ricocheting phrase love and ambiguity. And let me lift the word crochet, a craft that depends upon holes as much as it does thread. Take the poem ‘Bits and Pieces #3’ for example. It is not just a matter of crafting the missing pieces, but holding them as they jiggle, switching between sky and water, or hill and undergrowth. Is writing a continuous state of being, replete with ambiguity and flux, etched and anchored with love? Ah. How to face the silence, the blankness, the missing and ambiguous pieces? I utterly love the sequence that introduces Stella, an invented poet who is learning the grammar of grief, who is coming in from the garden, embraced by books, cooking badly, looking at hills and sky with infinite wonder.

The Garden (Stella)

Here you are, in from the garden,
smelling of yourself.

In your left hand is a present,
a tiny black box.

Inside is a single, perfect,
pointy leaf of thyme.

Bonfires on the Ice is a gift, in the bright light, the half light, the dream light. It is a lyrical record of living and loving, reading and writing, whether there are windows and doors or open plan. Yes there is the pain of bonfire and ice, but there is also the gradual breaking of ice in the flowing river. Near the end of the collection, a handful of poems draw Belinda closer, from the first long-ago meetings to the nearness of the hospice setting, her chemical life, their shared routines. And there in in the fading light, with the grief in me mounding, I read a couplet poem dedicated to hope. And inside the fragile dimensions of hope, I recognise the insistent infusion of love across the heart loops of the poetry. How this collection makes me hold these two precious words even closer. Sometimes when I review a book I might focus on the craft, but today what matters more than anything, is the way poetry can affect us so very deeply. And this book does exactly that.

Hope

Hope is a grey warbler,
that whistles down our street,
the tune is thin and sweet,
but always on repeat.

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.

Te Herenga Waka University Press page

Poetry Shelf 2026 launches with Robert Sullivan’s Tidbits of Te Tiriti -4

Te Tiriti Meditates

Haakina…

Remember the cicadas filling the air

Haaputa…

Feel the land beneath your toes slipping
with your jandals

Haakina…

Lift your eyes to the beach at Paihia

Haaputa…

And that sparkling wave, those oars dipping
rising at the side of the cutter

Haakina…

Hobson pulling on his hat and jacket

Haaputa…

We are one, be at one with him, be at one with them

Haakina…

Listen to the salute, boom.

Will that be American Express or Diners Club? asks Billy T. James.

Ka kimi patero ia. How embarrassing.


Robert Sullivan

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.

To launch Poetry Shelf 2026, our current Poet Laureate Robert Sullivan has written a sequence called “Tidbits of Te Tiriti”.  He wrote these Te Tiriti Tidbits in the voice of Te Tiriti o Waitangi. There will be one published each day for this Waitangi Day weekend, and then a fifth one on Feb 17th, which is the day his Ngāti Manu tūpuna signed Te Tiriti.

Poetry Shelf noticeboard: The Cuba Press Comes to Town

Wardini Books: Really, really, truly, madly, deeply looking forward to our The Cuba Press event this Thursday. Simon Sweetman is one of the guest writers and he’ll be talking about this volume of poetry, The Richard Poems, ‘a wild ride,’ says our Emma.

Join us – it’s free and fabulous and kicks off at Havelock North Library, 6pm, Thursday 12th Feb.

Poetry Shelf 2026 launches with Poet Laureate Robert Sullivan’s Tidbits of Te Tiriti -3

Two Tricksters, One Sequence

As far as I know, Māui and Billy T. never met.

I’m pretty sure Prince Tui Teka met Billy T.
And Sir Howard Morrison met Billy T.
I met Sir Howard once.
But Māui T. T. a T. never met Billy T.
So I’m e-introducing them.

Robert Sullivan

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.

To launch Poetry Shelf 2026, our current Poet Laureate Robert Sullivan has written a sequence called “Tidbits of Te Tiriti”.  He wrote these Te Tiriti Tidbits in the voice of Te Tiriti o Waitangi. There will be one published each day for this Waitangi Day weekend, and then a fifth one on Feb 17th, which is the day his Ngāti Manu tūpuna signed Te Tiriti.

Poetry Shelf noticeboard: Poetry Takeover in Aotea Square

Aotea Square

Enter a living canvas of words, movement, and sound.

A vibrant, multi-sensory spoken word experience celebrating Tāmaki Makaurau’s diverse poetry communities, hosted by MC Renee Liang – playwright, essayist, and poet.

Discover an eclectic mix of styles and voices: slam, Pasifika, te reo Māori, migrant perspectives, experimental works, and youth poets.

Unleash your own creativity! Prompting poets to create spontaneous poems in real time and poetry karaoke covering classic works.

Explore a kaleidoscope of activities: wander through chalk poetry, browse a market of books and zines, create blackout poetry on the Poet-tree, and craft visual poems with collage stickers and words..

Poetry Shelf noticeboard: Launch of Kate Camp’s Leather & Chains

Leather & Chains: My 1986 Diary by Kate Camp

‘Kate Camp reads the words of grownupchild Kate of 1986 – achingly funny, arch and louche, often shocking, always clever. And all of it threaded through with such pain and sadness and unsettling darkness, such yearning to be loved . . . I’ve often wondered about Kate Camp: how did she get to be so fearless, so peerless, so bold? The answer is in these pages.’ —Tracy Farr

Published 12 February 2026. Paperback, $40.

Poetry Shelf 2026 launches with Poet Laureate Robert Sullivan’s Tidbits of Te Tiriti -2

Te Tiriti and the Silvertop

As a child I hated
the silvertop milk
and its cream plugging
the shaft of the bottle.
The milk below
was watery.
Now I go out
of my way
to find
the bottles
which expire
on Feb 6th.

Robert Sullivan

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.

To launch Poetry Shelf 2026, our current Poet Laureate Robert Sullivan has written a sequence called “Tidbits of Te Tiriti”.  He wrote these Te Tiriti Tidbits in the voice of Te Tiriti o Waitangi. There will be one published each day for this Waitangi Day weekend, and then a fifth one on Feb 17th, which is the day his Ngāti Manu tūpuna signed Te Tiriti.

Poetry Shelf noticeboard: Bill Manhire and Jenny Bornholdt poetry launch

Double Book Launch: Bill Manhire and Jenny Bornholdt


11 February, 6pm, Unity Books Wellington
A joint launch of Lyrical Ballads by Bill Manhire and What to Wear by Jenny Bornholdt will be held at Unity Books Wellington. Two extraordinary poetry collections from two of Aotearoa’s most beloved former poet laureates, launched by Robyn Marsack – not to be missed! Free entry, all welcome. Please note: this is a changed date from the one advertised in our December newsletter!

Poetry Shelf noticeboard: Helen Rickerby Poetry Launch

Event by Auckland University Press

Southern Cross Garden Bar Restaurant

Join us to celebrate the launch of My Bourgeois Apocalypse, a new poetry collection by Helen Rickerby.

Friday 13 March
7pm

The Guest Room, out the back of the Southern Cross Garden Bar Restaurant
39 Abel Smith Street
Te Aro, Wellington

The book will be launched by Anna Jackson, with a reading by Helen.

In the spirit of the collection’s hybrid collage-essay-memoir form, this is a launch-cum-dance party, with music featured in the book playing throughout the night (mostly from the 80s). So bring your dancing shoes!

Books will be available for purchase on the night thanks to Unity Wellington.

About the book: https://aucklanduniversitypress.co.nz/my-bourgeois…/