Monthly Archives: September 2021

Poetry Shelf noticeboard: TURBINE | KAPOHAU – A NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF NEW WRITING is now accepting submissions

Writers, our online journal TURBINE | KAPOHAU – A NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF NEW WRITING is now accepting your submissions – poetry, creative nonfiction and fiction all welcome, but please read our submission guidelines first!

Go here for details

Poetry Shelf video: Vaughan Rapatahana reads at Medellin Columbia Poetry Festival

Vaughan Rapatahana begins many of his poems with a whakataukī. He is reading English versions of his poems that are then read in Spanish, but I love the way he brings in te reo Māori. Words say so much that are lost in translation, especially in poetry where each word is a rich vessel – words such as karakia and whanaunga. Vaughan’s poems consider death, place, whānau, significant issues such as global warming, the treatment of Māori. One poem particularly moved me: ‘Talking to my son in a funeral home’. Vaughan wondered why he keeps writing poems about and for his son who committed suicide 16 years ago. He shares his recent epiphany: that he writes of his son to keep his son alive. Later he reads a second poem, ‘The Zephyr’, a list poem, that is equally compelling (‘The zephyr that is my lost son still frisks me’). Ah. Ah. Ah. He reads a love poem he has written in te reo Māori to his wife, because he says he finds it easier to write how he feels in his first language.

To hear this coming together of te reo Māori, English and Spanish – a poetry meeting where words are held across distance to draw upon depth and intimacy – is a rare and glorious treat. Thank you.

Vaughan Rapatahana (Te Ātiawa) commutes between homes in Hong Kong, Philippines, and Aotearoa New Zealand. He is widely published across several genre in both his main languages, te reo Māori and English and his work has been translated into Bahasa Malaysia, Italian, French, Mandarin, Romanian, Spanish. Additionally, he has lived and worked for several years in the Republic of Nauru, PR China, Brunei Darussalam, and the Middle East.

You can read Vaughan’s knitting (love) poem here.

Vaughan Rapatahana reads and responds to ‘tahi kupu anake’

Poem: kia atawhai – te huaketo 2020 / be kind – the virus 2020

Poetry Shelf Monday Poem: Vana Manasiadis ‘Skylla draws the planet as three lippy women’

from one spark:
Skylla draws the planet as three lippy women

 

 

the planet as Klytaemnestra

 don’t shove you everywhere the tail yours        don’t
sear you the fish to the lips my                like the fish out
 of water                               δεν τρέμω         the fish stinks
 from the head             like the fish     σαν     out of water                
won’t cut I the throat my            το ψάρι     won’t lower
I the tail my           won’t shake like the fish I    

 

the planet as Medea

              show I the teeth my               
 squeeze I the teeth my
armed until the teeth  fight I
       with nails and with teeth   
 talk I inside from the teeth
talk I outside from
                                    the teeth                                   
  if don’t you have teeth
                   can’t you to bite
you can’t dodge this
    δράκου δόντι να’χεις δεν γλιτώνεις
not even with a dragon’s tooth

 

the planet as Antigone

from one spark grows a bushfire
 put I the hand           to the fire
     from one spark
είμαι                grows a bushfire
am I lava                     and fire
 the eyes my         throw sparks
                      fall I        
                  φωτιά     to the fire
the eyes                   my
                                     throw sparks
grab I the fire              και
                              put I the hand
   λάβρα                   to the fire
grab I the fire                  am I lava             
 lava                           am I and fire
and fire                   

Vana Manasiadis

Vana Manasiadis is a Greek-New Zealand poet and translator born in Te Whanganui-a-Tara and based in Tāmaki Makaurau after many years living in Kirihi Greece.  She is 2021 Ursula Bethell Writer-in-Residence at Te Whare Wanaga o Waitaha Canterbury University. Her most recent book was The Grief Almanac: A Sequel (Seraph Press).

Poetry Shelf Spring Season: Tara Black picks poems

Poetry Shelf is launching a new season, Readers Pick Poems, that will appear every Friday over the next few months. I have invited a group of readers to choose some Aotearoa poems they love. First up cartoonist Tara Black. She has chosen poems by Karlo Mila, Anna Jackson, Jackson Nieuwland, Hera Lindsay Bird and Rebecca Hawkes.

The poems

Leaving Prince Charming Behind

For a while I thought we were living the fairytale
but sadly I realised that this was      the myth
and you were so busy believing
that we were living the happy ever after
                I don’t think you noticed for a while
I’d rejected the role of princess in your production.

I am Rapunzel with her dreadlocks shorn
             trying to pull down the tower with broken nails
cursing your name.

I believed you the architect of my isolation
and it didn’t matter
what you tried to do
the poison apple was lodged firmly in my throat
and not believing in glass slipper
redemption
I worked my own midnight magic for all it was worth
re blood, white cloth
mirrors on the wall.

My poor dark prince on your gallant white horse
the shoe didn’t fit
your kiss couldn’t wake me up
to your way of thinking.

I transformed myself into
a beautiful dragon
you felt honour bound
to slay.

Karlo Mila

from Dream Fish Floating, Huia Publishers, 2005

Bees, so many bees

After twenty years of marriage, we walked out
of the bush and on to a rough dirt road
we followed till we saw a pond
we might be able to get to.
The ground was boggy and buzzing.
The pond was thick with weed
and slime. It was not
the sort of pond anyone would
swim in, but we did – picking and sliding
in to the water over the bog and bees,
bees we suddenly noticed were
everywhere, settling on our hair
as we swam, ducks turning surprised eyes
our way. After twenty years
of marriage what is surprising isn’t really
so much the person you are with
but to find yourselves so
out of place in this scene, cold
but not able to get out without stepping
over bees, so many bees.

Anna Jackson

from Pasture and Flock: New & Selected Poems, Auckland University Press, 2018

I am an ant.

In fact, I am the happiest ant in the world.

I wasn’t always the happiest ant in the world,
and I didn’t become the happiest ant in the world
by getting any happier                                                       

Another ant got sadder.

Jackson Nieuwland

from I Am a Human Being, Compound Press, 2020

THE EX-GIRLFRIENDS ARE BACK FROM THE WILDERNESS

The ex-girlfriends are back…
emerging once again from the tree shadows…
into the primordial burlesque of autumn
with their low-cut…
reminiscences… and soft, double ironies…
trembling once again into their
opulent…
seasonal migration patterns
a corsage of wilting apologies
tethered to the bust…

The ex-girlfriends are back…with their
hand-beaded consistencies…
& various unhappy motives…
dragging their heart like a soft broom through leaves…
and they go on hurting… like the lit windows
of a dollhouse in winter…
with a too-big house outside…

The ex-girlfriends are back
but in a romantically ambiguous way…

The ex-girlfriends are back and have transcended
the patriarchal limitations of romance…
unlike the new girlfriends…
still handcuffed to monogamy…
slowly writhing…
with their naughty…post-hetereosexual fatalism

The ex-girlfriends are back
with their unfounded Soviet aspirations…
and anti-hegemonic arts initiatives…
draped over a piano on the edge of the thicket
playing the lonely upper hand of chopsticks…
in their vague tropical displeasure…

The ex-girlfriends are back
and the post-girlfriends…
and the ‘let’s not put a label on this’ girlfriends…
all of them at the same time, walking through
a beaded curtain of water…
like too much Persephone and not enough underworld…
wearing nothing but an Arts degree…
and the soft blowtorch of their eyes…

You can feel their judgements come down upon you
like too-heavy butterflies…
but there’s nothing you can do about it!
and worst of all
they don’t even want anything…
they’re just standing there…performing many

enigmatic life blinks
re-mentioning Deleuze and Guattari
in loneliness and natural lighting
The ex-girlfriends are back
with their sanity pangs
and various life fatigues…
like a stuffed-crocodile exhibit
still begging for death relevance
in the glass case of your heart
But you are the museum director now!
Walking talent on a gold leash
& there’s nothing anyone can do about it!

The ex-girlfriends are back
like the liquidation sale of an imported rug megastore
that’s been liquidating for centuries…
getting rich off all that…tasselled goodbye money
as they grind your face yet again into
the hand-knotted…
semi-Persian wool blend…of their hearts
begging once more for closure.

The ex girlfriends are back
with their pre-distressed sadnesses
and their…talent
unlike yourself
who is both undistressed and talent-free!

Yet somehow still above them all
like the grand arbiter of happiness
laughing in your ermine neck ruff
as you push them one by one
down the waxed fuck-ff chute
of their bad erotic failures

Hera Lindsay Bird

from HERA LINDSAY BIRD, Victoria University Press, 2016

Nemesis Mine

yours is the name I hate most of all
which I know because I have been repeating it
between my teeth      instructing my minions
to conduct increasingly elaborate heists
that will lure you     at last          to your doom
       which is destined to be
      me         obviously

I burglarize a priceless artwork
which you had acquired at significant personal cost
I cut out the gently smiling face in the painting
and replace it with a selfie
so when you steal it back the painting is worthless
on the black market
but you do not get rid of it         
my spies report
       that you keep it under your pillow             
     gilded edges jutting out

you construct a laser superweapon 
to etch a gigantic tag of your name across the moon
on my birthday           ruining my luxury
moon themed full moon party        
to which I specifically did not invite you
though I did arrange a data leak     of the coordinates
      when you arrive in your warship    cannons booming
      my heart leaps in my throat     whilst I dive for cover

how many times have you sailed recklessly
over continents and ocean trenches     in hot pursuit
launching torpedoes as I careen in your spyglass sights   
cackling away on my gold plated jet ski        O nefarious
O dastardly        I live
to hurl bullion       back at you              from a slingshot
while my space squad of highly educated dolphins
breaks into the hull of your craft 
they purloin small items of enormous sentimental value
and release the conspiracy of lemurs you have trafficked 
       and trained to paint flawless reproductions 
       of frankly dated masterworks      

loose at last     the bandit-faced primates
graffiti your clandestine labyrinth 
with the same tasteless repetitive sunflowers  
but you have already arranged for special forces
to capture me at the border
loathsome       busybody        
      I hate you              I hate you
      I wouldn’t have it any other way

and yet         my last several escapades went off
without a hitch   
and I can no longer intercept
your vile machinations         on any channel
even the encryptions only you and I use
mortal enemy         the world is boring
without your meddling     
      I lie awake     
      awaiting intel        

apparently you are spending your days
in a state of deranged reasonableness
you have been waking early to jog
without your bespoke catsuit or balaclava
your throwing stars rusting in their cabinet      
you have taken to hand crocheting
hanging baskets for your carnivorous plants
you have filed tax returns on a number of offshore accounts
thereby defeating their very purpose
and you have quibbled
          on consumer review sites for home appliances
          under your real name

I cannot abide all this        ruin by prudence
come for me   you coward 
get! in! your! pirate! ship!
you say           you have been taking “therapy”
you are “working on yourself”
your psychoanalyst has some
     “reservations”
      about our          “relationship”

ahoy there      mouthbreathing brigand
thinking yourself too damaged for a final duel
I see it             I do      who knows you better than I
sniveling craven       stand and fight      yes    
your shame is coiled up inside you
and ready to play       yes
your shame is a slinky
delightful in rainbows
as it loops over itself going down
and down and down the spiral
stairwell       in the frivolous castle
you built for your dreams      
      this is not an invitation to tell me
      the unfinished business of your childhood

but do you really think you can outdo me
in abjection                 never fear
I will draw my own shame out of my throat
like a sparkling feather boa I will drape it
over my shoulders                  I will perform
a sensual dance using my shame as a prop
I will helicopter my shame wildly in front of my crotch
oi enemy oi nemesis          look at moi
through all our capers and larceny
did you think I couldn’t anticipate this twist
      our ultimate boss battle
      a public redemption arc 

I always expected we would grow old together
spending our ill gotten gains
to purchase adjacent volcanic island lairs
like two humongous tits jutting up from the ocean
we would spit at each other across the archipelago
and in the evenings
with our weakening arms
     we would row halfway out in our canoes
     and wrestle


Rebecca Hawkes

Tara Black is an Aotearoa cartoonist with a deep abiding love for fried potato. She can often be found in the front row of book events, illustrating authors and their ideas. You can find her work in places which almost exclusively start with the letter ‘s’: The Sapling, Stasis Journal, The Spinoff, The Suburban Review, and her website, taracomics.com. Her first graphic novel, This Is Not a Pipe, was published by Victoria University Press in 2020.

Hera Lindsay Bird was a poet from Wellington. She hasn’t written a poem in a long time, and no longer lives in Wellington. 

Rebecca Hawkes is a queer pākehā poet, painter, and PowerPoint slide ghostwriter living in Te-Whanganui-a-Tara. Her chapbook ‘Softcore coldsores’ can be found in AUP New Poets 5. She is co-editor of the journal Sweet Mammalian and an upcoming anthology of climate change poetry, and is a founding member of popstar performance posse Show Ponies. More of Rebecca’s writing and paintings can be found in journals like Starling, Sport, Scum, and Stasis, or online at her vanity mirror.

Anna Jackson lectures at Te Herenga Waka/Victoria University of Wellington, lives in Island Bay, edits AUP New Poets and has published seven collections of poetry, most recently Pasture and Flock: New and Selected Poems (AUP 2018).

Karlo Mila is a mother, writer, poet and indigenous knowledge geek.  She lives in Tāmaki Makaurau with her three sons.  Karlo is especially over-active on Facebook.  She works in the area of leadership for her day job, trying to understand and explore what that means when drawing on the ancestral knowledge of those who have lived in this region for over three thousand years.  Of Tongan, Pākehā and Samoan descent, figuring out and living what this means in this contemporary context is often centred in her work.

Jackson Nieuwland is a human being, duh. They are a genderqueer writer, editor, librarian, and woo-girl, born and based in Te Whanganui-a-Tara. They co-founded the reading/zine series Food Court. This isn’t even their final form. Their debut collection, I Am a Human Being, won Best First Poetry Book at the Ockham NZ Book Awards 2021.

Poetry Shelf Spring Season: readers pick poems

Tomorrow I am launching a new season on Poetry Shelf. I have invited a number of readers to pick a handful of Aotearoa poems they love. No easy task! I have trouble reducing all the poems I love to an anthology, so I know assembling a tiny gathering is a challenge. Over the coming months you will see the choices of Tara Black, Victor Rodger, Emma Espiner, Peter Ireland, Claire Mabey, Foodcourt, a crew from AWF, Sally Blundell, Rebecca K Reilly and Francis Cooke, among others. I am both excited and moved by this season – especially because these readers have put in their own time and enthusiasms to share a connective love of poetry.

This photograph is as close as I get to the ocean at the moment. The blurry photo is standing in for my blurry mind. Me walking up and down the road to gaze out to the Tasman Sea. For so many of us in Tāmaki Makaurau, we get to the ocean at the moment by reading, by dreaming and finding new and old ways to be and stay at home. Music helps. Cooking comfort food definitely helps. Poetry too can be such a connecting delight, reaching across the divides to fingertap warmth, ideas, feelings, music, whether soothing or spiky.

I am grateful to the readers, poets and publishers who have contributed so generously with writings, cartoons, permissions and choices.

Poetry Shelf farewells Lydia Wevers

🙏 It is with great sadness, I farewell Lydia Wevers. This is my well-thumbed much-loved copy of Yellow Pencils: Contemporary Poetry by New Zealand Women, the second anthology that drew local women’s poems under a spotlight. So many readers, writers and students, along with friends and family, are sharing how this remarkable woman has affected them; mentored, inspired, opened windows. As the writer of Wild Honey I followed in her groundbreaking footsteps. From my Level 4 isolation, I am linking in grief with everyone who is mourning, with others who are also lost for words. Let us toast Lydia today. Let us toast her warmth and acumen, her dedication to writing, research, fresh ideas, New Zealand books and, above all, humanity. 🙏

Poetry Shelf Monday Poem: Paula Green’s ‘for your heart’

for your heart

a prayer for your lungs inhaling the salted oceans
a prayer for your knees buckled in sludge and flood
a prayer for your stomach wounded by one man’s hatred
a prayer for your shoulders bearing the freight of the world
a prayer for your hips holding your small child close
a prayer for your hands that soothe and caress
a prayer for your tongue that sings to heal

a prayer for the Muslim’s heart, warm and beating
a prayer for the Christian’s heart, also warm and beating
a prayer for the beating-heart warmth of the tangata whenua
a prayer for the beating-heart warmth of Afghan refugees, so recently welcomed
a prayer for your heart beating in time with the sun and the stars
a prayer for your heartache traversing the rough and the wild
a prayer for your heart in sync with the land and the water
a prayer for she and he and they

a prayer for your ears listening to ever-bleak media feeds
a prayer for your eyes breaking up over images and statistics
a prayer for your fingers unravelling daily knots and tough choices
a prayer for your tiredness and a prayer for your despair
a prayer for your silence and a prayer for your protest
a prayer for your movement over corrugated roads and bendy tracks
a prayer for the lonely and the unloved or the led astray

a prayer for your face that shuts out the name-calling
a prayer for your arms that lower the raised weapon
a prayer for your leaders that face boulders and crevasses
a prayer for your legs that cross cruel divides and welcome bridges
a prayer for your body that is sick or wounded or dying

a prayer for the blue sky overhead with the kerurū coasting 
a prayer for your children lost in daydream kites and story locomotives
a prayer for your children digging garden soil and planting spring seeds
a prayer for kawakawa leaves brewing and manukā balm
a prayer for your lentil soup warming and your words of love
a prayer for your arms open wide and your arms embracing

a prayer for your heart
a prayer for your heart
a prayer for your heart
yes you and you and you

Paula Green

September, West Auckland

Poetry Shelf noticeboard: my newsroom piece

I wasn’t going to post anything today. Life is overflowing with bends in the road for me at the moment, where I can’t exactly see what is ahead. I have been musing on the bends in our road and how I love them. This was me out walking yesterday, in the brilliant blue-sky day, breathing in the clean air, savouring the after-storm gleam. Straight roads would be so much less satisfying. Bliss.

At the start of the year I decided to write things (“psuedo books”) with scant if any aim to get published again. It is is liberating, to write out of a love of writing. But against all odds, on Wednesday I agreed to write a piece for Newsroom on floods and Covid-19, even though I live on a safe hill in a bush haven, with an ability to fill my days with no sense of being locked up or locked out or locked in. Yet life is not normal – I am constantly under threat of deluge.

The floods this week have been devastating for some families. But what has struck me is the way communities come together. I belong to three private communities bongos out west and the support is staggering. None more so at my nearby beach, at Te Henga. The houses there are still cut off, but the community is strengthening a strong support network. I see this happening so often in the time of Covid. Individuals doing astonishing things to help those with unbearable challenges. The 100 plus nurses heading to Auckland to work in hospitals. Wow! The bus drivers who keep going to work despite abuse. The way South Auckland faces unforgivable and ignorant racial abuse.

Poems are a lifeline. Like I say in the piece, poetry is an energy boost for me. As are our poetry communities.

Next Friday I will starting a new season – I am very excited about it.

My full Newsroom piece here

‘Monday night and the rain and thunder are loud and relentless. Uncharacteristically I am tweeting that I am scared. I never do personal tweets. I have never tweeted I am scared in a storm. Maybe it is the intense noise. We are watching tv, but the tv reception is on storm fade, and I am missing the final of Australian Master Chef after months of viewing.  This is upsetting me as much as the storm.’

Poetry Shelf audio: Tim Grgec reads from All Tito’s Children

All Tito’s Children, Tim Grgec, Victoria University Press, 2021

An intro:

Tim reads ‘Infectious Divides’:

Tim reads ‘Lost Tendencies’:

Tim Grgec was the 2018 recipient of the Biggs Family Prize for Poetry. Having failed to achieve his childhood dream of playing for the Black Caps, he now has delusions of becoming a great writer. His first book, All Tito’s Children, is out now with Victoria University Press.

Victoria University Press page