Monthly Archives: June 2015
Starling: Showcasing New Zealand’s Best Young Writers – to be edited by Louise Wallace & Marty Smith
Starling takes flight
Showcasing New Zealand’s Best Young Writers
A new opportunity for young writers has emerged today. Starling (www.starlingmag.com) is an online literary journal that will be published twice yearly, accepting poetry and prose from only New Zealanders under 25 years of age.
The founder and editor is poet, Louise Wallace, author of two collections of poetry and the current Robert Burns Fellow at the University of Otago. The journal will be an opportunity for young writers to showcase their work in a professional environment to a national audience. “There is nothing quite like this out there at the moment in New Zealand – certainly not with the national focus we hope to cultivate,” Wallace says. “It can be difficult for young writers to find publication with our more established print journals when they are competing for space with writers who have twenty or thirty or forty year’s experience. Starling levels the playing field.”
Wallace is keen to convey that the quality of the work will still be there. “Just because a writer is under a certain age, does not mean the quality of the work is any less. The journal has a high standard for acceptance and we are committed to presenting our contributors and their work seriously – in that way the submissions we receive and the writing we publish will be the best of the best.”
Starling is also focused on a community approach. Each issue of the journal will open with new work from an established New Zealand writer and will close with an interview with a person of note from the literary industry. Wallace says there are a few things that are crucial to the journal’s success. “The first is obviously getting young writers to submit. But we also need support from readers. We have a selection of posters available on our website that people can download and put up out in the real world to encourage submissions, and the website also allows supporters to sign up for email updates. Without these people taking that extra step, there will be no community.”
Submissions are now open for Issue 1, with a deadline of 20 October 2015, the issue to be published January 2016.
Wallace is joined by Co-editor, Francis Cooke, and Schools Coordinator, Marty Smith, who like Wallace, are graduates of the International Institute of Modern Letters MA programme. Cooke’s short stories have been published in a number of national journals, and Smith’s first collection of poems, Horse with Hat, won the Jesse Mackay Award for Best First Book of Poetry at the 2014 NZ Post Book awards, and was a finalist in the poetry category. Smith is also a high school teacher, and will work with Wallace to deliver the journal as a resource for New Zealand teachers in the classroom.
Starling: a new journal for writers under 25 is seeking submissions
Sweet Mammalian #2 is sweet indeed – Where do I start? Every click comes up poetry trumps
Selina Tusitala Marsh wins the Literary Death Match at the Australian New Zealand Festival in London
Leonel Alvardo’s in North & South – His new collection enters Kiwi vernacular, cold houses, science projects
A few thoughts:
Great to see North & South magazine showcase a poet. They always publish a poem from a recent publication with a few notes. I applaud them for this. Leonel Alvarado’s collection, Driving with Neruda to the Fish ‘n’ Chips, is a poetic viewing of an adopted country, of the little details that we become immune to, take for granted, but that jut out to startle and bemuse the visitor from elsewhere. This poetic mirror refreshes relations with our way of doing things (walking through the back door past the laundry to go inside, walking barefoot to the shops). But the collection is far more than this as the links back to poetic origins, to home, are never severed. Things are often a gateway to ideas. Musings. I particularly loved the long title poem that embraces Don Pablo. The sequence is like a glorious meditation on living, on being a poet.
A poet of pots
he instinctively wants to go
for the soups, and I am sad to admit
that Don Pablo is quickly disapponted
in this soupless land. A country,
he laments, an entire country
without pots; in fact, more poets
than pots.
(an extract)
This is a book of things but it is a richness of things and what they yield beyond physical immediacy. I particularly liked ‘The chair’s memory’: ‘The chair is how the kauri forgets/ itself into the world.’ The poet wearing the shoes of the philosopher.
The NS article made me pick Leonel’s collection up and start rereading instead of getting out into the garden and planting things. This is a book that lays down anchors, sends physical tendrils skyward as much as soilwards. There is an addictive gentleness, contemplation, intellectual agility, interrogation. At times stillness. At times rupture. The book draws you into the beating heart of home, of being a poet. Elsewhere or here. This is worth reading.
The book was published by HauNui Press as part of the 2014Kete series (edited by poet Helen Lehndorf.
HauNui Press page
Tim Jones review here















