Monthly Archives: July 2016

Happy Birthday Sam Hunt

Radio NZ has produced a small video of Sam Hunt reading a few poems  from his new collection, Salt River Songs. It is a perfect snap shot of Sam at home in the Kaipara, and of the lyrical joy of his poetry. Altogether mesmerising.

h a p p y   b i r t h d a y  S a m Hunt, you are our poetry icon extraordinaire, and poetry in New Zealand would not be the same without you. We grew up with Sam-Hunt poems sizzling and simmering in our blood.

T h a  n k   y o u !

 

 

 

Launch of Extraordinary Anywhere

Extraordinary Anywhere: Essays on Place from Aotearoa New Zealand

I heard a taste of this at the Ruapehu Writers Festival and was hooked.

 

 

Victoria University Press warmly invite you to the launch of

Extraordinary Anywhere: Essays on place from Aotearoa New Zealand
edited by Ingrid Horrocks and Cherie Lacey

on Tuesday 26 July, 6.00pm–7.30pm
at Unity Books, 57 Willis St, Wellington.

The launch will include short readings by essayists Tim Corballis, Lynn Jenner, Tina Makereti, Harry Ricketts and Lydia Wevers.

With thanks to the School of English and Media Studies, Massey University, for helping to support this launch.

 
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Sarah Jane Barnett interviews Paula Green

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Sarah Jane Barnett recently interviewed me about my new collection, New York Pocket Book. The shoe was on the foot, for a change! I really enjoyed the questions.  Took me right back to New York!

For the complete interview go here.

SJB: The poems in New York Pocket Book touch on the idea that the experience of being a tourist can give us a new way to see and experience ourselves. The collection’s main character, Josephine, closely observes her new experiences – the ‘American accent dipping and pausing,’ the ‘Manhattan sky.’ The idea works on two levels, with Josephine experiencing New York and with the reader experiencing Josephine. Can you speak to this idea in terms of your poetry? Do you see the poem as a way to provide a reader with a new experience of themselves?

PG: Perhaps any book refreshes our view of ourselves to varying degrees, but I really like the multiple reading experiences you have spotted. Learning another language for years, I always felt I wore my clothes slightly differently, that I had licence to be a slightly different person. I get that feeling when I stay in foreign cities. I am both myself and not myself. I eat things I might not normally eat. My daily routine goes out the window. So is it a stretch to say the reader in entering a book that is anchored in an iconic place, triggers different relations with the world and self? I don’t know but it’s a fascinating idea. One of the upshots of learning another language, is the way you learn more about your own language. Conversely, when someone speaks a foreign language they always leave clues about their mother tongue. When we experience a new city, we open windows on the familiar as much as we do the unfamiliar. So perhaps the poem is the surrogate new city, the surrogate new language.

Josephine is somewhat elusive. You are right in that you view her through a New York filter (and vice versa) and everything else lands in accidental traces. Some readers might crave more of her backstory but I resisted that. There are some red-hot traces though hiding away. This is a pocket book after all.

3 VUP launches worth checking out

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Really love Kerrin’s new book  – looking forward to reading the other two on the cusp of launches!

 

Book launch
Rabbit Rabbit by Kerrin P. Sharpe at St Andrew’s College, Christchurch,
on Tuesday 5 July,
6.00 pm–7.30 pm.
All welcome.

Book launch
Hera Lindsay Bird by Hera Lindsay Bird at Unity Books
on Thursday 14 July, 6.00 pm–7.30 pm.
All welcome.

Book launch
Extraordinary Anywhere, edited by Ingrid Horrocks and Cherie Lacey at Unity Books on Tuesday 26 July, 6.00 pm–7.30 pm.
All welcome.