Press release from Otago University Press:
Dazzling new poetry collection from David Eggleton
The Conch Trumpet calls to the scattered tribes of contemporary New Zealand. It sounds the signal to listen close, critically and ‘in alert reverie’. David Eggleton’s reach of references, the marriage of high and low, the grasp of popular and classical allusion, his eye both for cultural trash and epiphanic beauty, make it seem as if here Shakespeare shakes down in the Pacific.
There are dazzling compressions of history; astonishing paens to harbours, mountains, lakes and rivers; wrenchingly dark, satirical critiques of contemporary politics, of solipsism, narcissism, the apolitical, the corporate, with a teeming vocabulary to match. And often too a sense of the imperative, grounding reality of the phenomenal world – the thisness of things:
Cloud whispers brush daylight’s ear;
fern question-marks form a bush encore;
forlorn heat swings cobbed in webs.
– from ‘Nor-wester Flying’
In this latest collection David Eggleton is court jester/philosopher/lyricist, and a kind of male Cassandra, roving warningly from primeval swampland to gritty cityscape to the information and disinformation cybercloud.
David Eggleton lives in Dunedin. He has previously had published six books of poems
and a book of short fiction, as well as a number of works of non-fiction. Well known as a performance poet, he’s also released several poetry recordings featuring his collaborations with musicians, and been involved in poetry text collaborations with practitioners of a variety of other art forms, from sculpture to fashion design. His poetry and short stories appear in a wide range of recent anthologies. |
‘David Eggleton’s word-blasts feel like they come from further left-of-centre than anything else written in New Zealand … It is endlessly imaginative, it’s funny – plus intellectually rewarding.’
Nick Ascroft, Landfall, 2002
‘His poetry is vital and contemporary, steeped in popular and postmodern culture. It offers a vision of New Zealand which is at once resolutely local and yet not quite recognisable or predictable – offers a vision of ourselves which defies expectation to surprise and charm.’ – Louise O’ Brien, Dominion Post, 2001.
Release Date: February 2015
ISBN 978-1-877578-93-9, $25