Monthly Archives: March 2014

Invitation to a Book Launch: Alan Brunton’s Beyond the Ohlala Mountains with a terrific lineup of guests

BEYOND THE OHLALA MOUNTAINS
Beyond the Ohlala Mountains 
Alan Brunton / Poems 1968-2002

Book Launch

Date: Thursday, 27 March 2014

Time: 6:30 for 7-9pm

Venue: Wharekai at the University of Auckland’s Waipapa Marae, 16 Wynyard St.

Titus Books is proud to launch Beyond the Ohlala Mountains: Alan Brunton / Poems 1968-2002. Drawing on twelve published collections and the rich resource of his papers, editors Michele Leggott and Martin Edmond present a selection that shows for the first time the scope of Brunton’s poetics as well as his trademark linguistic bravura.

Join us for a glass of wine to launch the book with readings and performances in the spirit of Red Mole and Roadworks, those experimental theatre troupes that put so many of Alan Brunton’s words in the mouths of singers, musicians and actors.

Performers include Anne Kennedy, Arthur Baysting, Barry Saunders, Bob Orr, Brian Potiki, International Superstars of Westlynn, Jean McAllister, Jeff Henderson, John Davies, John Newton, Kilda Northcott, Ksenija Chobanovich, Leila Adu, Madeline McNamara, Mr Sterile Assembly, Murray Edmond, Nisha Madhan, Peter Simpson, Ruby Brunton, Russell Haley, Stephen Bain and Tony McMaster.

For further information please contact publicist Simone Kerr simonekerr@gmail.com.

Caoilinn Hughes reads a stunning poem on Kim Hill

Caoilinn Hughes on Kim Hill

Kim Hill has slightly made up for not being in the audience at Wellington’s Writers and Readers Week this year. I miss it! But what a terrific show on the radio this morning.

One highlight was hearing Caoilinn Hughes read her poem ‘The Transit of Venus.’ The poem is from  her debut collection, Gathering Evidence (Victoria University Press, 2014).

I can’t wait to read and then review the book. Thanks to VUP I have a copy to give away to someone who likes this post or the review i will post next week.

 

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Great Bookshops and the Art of Selling Poetry

NZ Booksellers invited me to write a piece on selling poetry in New Zealand. It was a great chance to sing the praises of bookshops that stock poetry and create innovative events along with the traditional, and much loved, launches.

 

 

Great Bookshops and the Art of Selling Poetry

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Posted on March 6, 2014 on The Read

 

Roger and Helen Parsons had a room devoted to New Zealand books in their now-closed Wellesley-Street shop (Parsons Books, Auckland). In my mind it contained the most comprehensive selection of New Zealand poetry I have seen in a local bookstore, apart from the second-hand ones. Helen diligently kept a terrific backlist of New Zealand poets and stayed up-to-date with new releases. You could also find exquisite, hand-bound poetry books that were verging on art. This was where I launched my own books for a number of years, as it provided both a convivial place to celebrate my new arrivals and a chance to applaud these dedicated booksellers.

Great Bookshops for Poetry
Bookshops still stock poetry, but as poetry attracts such a niche market, the selection on offer becomes increasingly limited. Last year, I decided to be an unofficial ambassador for children’s poetry in New Zealand – to celebrate and promote children’s poetry books (and the reading and writing of it) in every way I could.

I created a page, Great Bookshops, on my blog New Zealand Poetry Box, to showcase bookshops that stocked a fabulous range of both local and international poetry books for children. I included details and photographs of shops such as The Children’s Bookshop in Wellington, and the Children’s Bookshops in in Auckland and Christchurch, both Unity Books, Next Page Please, The Women’s Bookshop and Time Out Book Shop in Auckland, Rona Gallery and Marsden Books in Wellington, Page and Blackmore in Nelson, and Dunedin’s University Bookshop.

For the rest of the article see here

McCahon Series: Poetry Reading at Te Papa

     McCahon Series: Poetry Reading

When:
Sat 15 Mar 2014,  2pm–3pm
Where:
Ngā Toi | Arts Te Papa, Level 5
Cost:
Free entry
Type:
Performance 

 

Greg O'Brien
Image of Greg O’Brien by Jason O’Hara

 

Some of New Zealand’s best-known poets respond to Colin McCahon’s Walk (Series C) in this reading of specially commissioned poems, introduced by Greg O’Brien.

Eight poets have written poems inspired by McCahon’s work: Bill Manhire, Dinah Hawken, Hinemoana Baker, Ashleigh Young, James Brown, Vincent O’Sullivan, John Pule, and Paula Green.

A number of these poets join us to read their work.

JAAM 2013: my taster of treats (so far)

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Harvey Molloy (poet and teacher) joined with Clare Needham (JAAM‘s co-managing editor) to edit ‘The 2013 Issue.’ While not enforcing a particular theme, the editors did present several questions that contributing poets could bear in mind: What are you thinking about now? What is your 2013 issue?

This bumper issue is a mix of prose and poetry from established and emerging writers, and reflects the way New Zealand writing absorbs an eclectic range of thought and issues (stunning cover BTW!).

Here is taster of my poem treats so far:

Emma Barne’s ‘I am in bed with you’ is a lushly detailed, astonishing roller-coaster of a poem. It’s hypnotic pattern of decreasing lines and increasing ellipsis takes you back to 1994 and to the white-hot core at the poem’s end.

Helen Yong’s ‘The Tea Ceremony’ is refined in focus. The sweetly crafted detail of the teapot ceremony offers cues to a relationship (he and she, then we).

Vaughan Rapatahana’s ‘it’s 3 a.m. in papatoetoe,’ exudes visual playfulness that makes music chime in your ear.

The melodic narrative is both strange and compelling in Joanna Preston’s ‘Fare.’

There’s the terrific discovery of Natasha Dinnerstein; from the sheer elegance of ‘Articulated’ to the hot beat and pulsing detail of ‘Grecian Urn Dance Remix.’

And Helen Heath’s short poem broken into two parallel blocks (a shudder of silence or synchopation down the middle) like two frontal lobes.

Or David Howard’s dynamic ‘Venture My Word’ that also used parallel blocks of verse to play with breath and movement.

The surprise and vitality of Rachel Fenton’s ‘The Scientist’ (I loved the structure). Loved this poem!

I haven’t started the prose yet, and there still poems to read. I don’t know why, but I always dip in and out of journals, landing wherever a page falls open. This doesn’t provide a view of the editors’ crafted arc, but it is a perfect way to slip poetic treats into a day. In response to the editors’ questions, regardless of whether the contributors addressed them directly, NZ poets have all manner of things on their mind—and like a prism, the poems catch myriad traces of time and place in their light.

Guest editor for 2014 is Sue Wootton.

JAAM link.

Three Poets at Pah Homestead

Three Poets – an evening of poetry reading

20 March 2014, 6:30pm, Drawing Room, Pah Homestead – reservations required
Join poets Emma NealePaula Green and Siobhan Harvey for an evening of poetry reading at the Pah Homestead. This is an opportunity to hear current and published work from the writers, purchase publications and view current exhibitions.
Cost: $10 (cash)
To reserve a seat: Please email enquiries@wallaceartstrust.org.nz or phone Reception 09 639 2010.
The Pah Cafe will be open, with a range of beverages available to purchase. 

Call for registrations for National Poetry Day 201

Call for registrations for National Poetry Day 2014

 

National Poetry Day is a New Zealand-wide celebration of poetry and runs in conjunction with the New Zealand Post Book Awards.

 

National Poetry Day will be on the 22nd of August this year, and registrations are now open for the official calendar of events.

 

All registered events and activities will be included in the official calendar of events.

 

Event Registrations and Funding Applications both close on the 1st of July. You can register your events and apply for funding online at the following links or by returning the forms at the back of the Guidelines Pack.

 

Online Event Registration Form: http://goo.gl/GR90Gq

 

Online Funding Application Form: http://goo.gl/vVQDAt

 

Or you can download the full Guidelines and Application Pack from: http://booksellers.co.nz/awards/new-zealand-post-book-awards/poetry-day

Ben Brown’s The Kindling and the Blaze is poetry from the heart

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Ben Brown Between the Kindling and the Blaze (Anahera Press, 2013)

Ben Brown (Ngāti Paoa, Ngāti Mahuata) is an award-winning writer, performer and children’s author currently living in Lyttelton. His debut poetry collection, Between the Kindling and the Blaze, was completed during his residency at the Michel King Writers’ Centre in Devonport. He has previously released a CD of poetry entitled Dogtown (2010).

With scant collections by Māori writers making an appearance in New Zealand’s poetry scene, this book is an important arrival. Ben declares from the outset that these poems are ‘reflections on the concept of mana.’ A preface story introduces humans (a man) to the vastness and the smallness of the world: mountain, rock, grain of sand, tree. It speaks of how a human can furnish a shelter from sand, rock and wood, and how it can be built with both love and dignity. In this way, a family shelter becomes ‘a place of mana.’

The book, fittingly, is dedicated to whānau.

And so the poems, also a shelter for friends, family, whānau, are miniature edifices crafted with dignity and love. These poems become vessels for the poet’s loving kōrero. Mana is there between the kindling and the blaze, between an idea and and an experience. Mana is in the wisdom of the grandfather, but it is in a host of surprising things. Through this poetic contemplation, you are taken from moko to hui, from the ‘concrete cold of a city’ to Presidential dreamings, from James K Baxter to Hone Tuwhare. The poems become reattached to the world–to values and to customs.

Ben centres a lot of the poems on the page (Western poets have a habit of hugging the left-hand margin). It becomes a different way of reading with the billowing, silent beats on either side of the poems. It accentuates the music of the shortened lines that swell and contract like the belly of a vessel (that place for kōrero that comes from the heart, but that holds itself open to politics).

Listening to a selection of the poems on the CD, heightens the music and the sense of contemplation. I particularly loved ‘Taniwha’ (a subtle evocation of the force that ‘is there for all to see’), the lyrical delights of ‘The heron is God,’ the cheeky warm tribute to Hone Tuwhare in ‘Chur bro,’ the twists and turns of ‘I am the Māori Jesus’ as it jams with the Baxter original. Like Hone, Ben mixes up his language, mixes up the voices, the tone of the lines.

The book, like a good LP, demands to be replayed.

Anahera Press page

New Zealand Book Council page

Storylines page

Random House page

Interview with NZ Children’s Authors, Christchurch Public Library