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Poetry Shelf Monday Poem: Anne Kennedy’s ‘Fox and Hounds’
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1.
In the summer you might end up going for a lager
at a pretty beer garden named for the slaughter
of the endangered red fox by marauding dogs
followed by boomy packs of rich folk on horseback
who own the dogs, the horses, the land where the fox
lived its short life. You might be interested to know
that in the UK it is no longer legal to let the dogs
tear the fox to shreds. It must be killed humanely
whereby the hunters dismount, walk towards the fox
in their high brown boots and shoot it in the head.
Meanwhile hunt saboteurs lay citronella to put the dogs
off the scent, and wires to trip the horses (poor horses).
You may end up wanting to tripwire the property
market because you hate the property market.
2.
You end up at an auction where young people bid
astronomical amounts for dumps in outer suburbs
which they could make into a home with a bit of work.
But the investor in the corner walks over in their boots
and bids and bids until they own all the houses. They
can’t live in all the houses, they don’t need all the houses
but they want them, and they can have them because
the policy-makers say that they can. They say, one day
we’ll build more houses, we’ll limit investing, and also
young people like flatting, they like houses the size of
a cupboard. Not us, but then, we’ve always had a house
we’ve always had a house with two bathrooms, a garden
and a garage in a nice street. Oh, and we have another
house, in the country, and the fox is already dead.
Anne Kennedy
Anne Kennedy is a poet, fiction writer and screenplay editor. Her most recent books are Moth Hour (AUP) and The Ice Shelf (VUP). Awards include the NZ Post Book Award for Poetry and the Montana Book Award for Poetry.
Poetry Shelf noticeboard: Listen to Wild Dogs under My Skirt @RNZ

Having read the book, listened to Tusiata Aviaperform, and seen one of the theatre performances I recommend this astonishing play.
Listen here
Poetry Shelf noticeboard: more WORD podcasts available
You can listen to ‘Letters to Ōtatauhi’, ‘Wild Honey: A Celebration of NZ Women’s Poetry’, ‘Remembering Ralph Hotere’, Landmarks: Sydney, Marshall,Turner,’ ‘Ko Aotearoa Tātou | We Are New Zealand’, ‘Going Viral’, ‘Finding a Place’, Farid Ahmed: Hasna’s Story’, Dear Katherine’, ‘Adventurous Women’, ‘An Hour with Vincent O’Sullivan’, ‘Poet Laureate’s Choice’, ‘An Evening with Witi Ihimaera and Kingsley Spargo’, ‘Pip Adam: Nothing to See’, ‘Bill Manhire Wow’, ‘Elizabeth Knox and The Absolute Book’, ‘Talking Animals: Laura Jean Mckay and Philip Armstrong’ and much more.
Go here
Poetry Shelf celebrates Ockham NZ Book Awards Poetry shortlist: Tusiata Avia – Ten things I love
Ten things I love
1. A photograph: The photo is of Sepela – exactly 10 years ago, a week after the big earthquake when we escaped to Hinemoana’s who lived in Kapiti then.
2. A poem by someone else: ‘All they want is my money my pussy my blood’ by Morgan Parker (and pretty much anything from her book, There are more beautiful things than Beyonce.
3. A song: ‘Back to Life‘ by Soul II Soul
4. A book: Hurricane Season, Fernando Melchor, trans. Sophie Hughes, New Directions, 2020 (my favourite book of 2020)

5. A movie: My Neighbour Totoro

6. A place: South Sinai coast, Egypt
7. A meal: taro (cooked in the umu) and palusamu
8. A poetic motif: Can’t think of one, but I can think of a form I love – the pantoum.
9. A place to write: Where ever the ‘thing’ is happening (see Five questions below)
10. A poem from my book:
250th anniversary of James Cook’s arrival in New Zealand
Hey James,
yeah, you
in the white wig
in that big Endeavour
sailing the blue, blue water
like a big arsehole
FUCK YOU, BITCH.
James,
I heard someone
shoved a knife
right up
into the gap between
your white ribs
at Kealakekua Bay.
I’m gonna go there
make a big Makahiki luau
cook a white pig
feed it to the dogs
and FUCK YOU UP, BITCH.
Hey James,
it’s us.
These days
we’re driving round
in SUVs
looking for ya
or white men like you
who might be thieves
or rapists
or kidnappers
or murderers
yeah, or any of your descendants
or any of your incarnations
cos, you know
ay, bitch?
We’re gonna FUCK YOU UP.
Tonight, James,
it’s me
Lani, Danielle
and a car full of brown girls
we find you
on the corner
of the Justice Precinct.
You’ve got another woman
in a headlock
and I’ve got my father’s
pig-hunting knife
in my fist
and we’re coming to get you
sailing round
in your Resolution
your Friendship
your Discovery
and your fucking Freelove.
Watch your ribs, James
cos, I’m coming with
Kalaniōpu‘u
Kānekapōlei
Kana‘ina
Keawe‘ōpala
Kūka‘ilimoku
who is a god
and Nua‘a
who is king with a knife.
And then
James,
then
we’re gonna
FUCK.
YOU.
UP.
FOR.
GOOD.
BITCH.
Tusiata Avia
Five questions
Is writing a pain or a joy, a mix of both, or something altogether different for you?
A mix, for sure. Often, I don’t feel like writing – unless I have an experience (internal or out in the world) that I feel the need to write about immediately. At times like that, I feel a sense of urgency, sometimes verging on desperation, to stop whatever I’m doing and write. I have pulled the car over on a busy motorway and searched for a piece of paper to scribble it down . I’m not great at the discipline of writing every day.
Name a poet who has particularly influenced your writing or who supports you.
I don’t read her so much these days, but I love Sharon Olds. She helped me to write more openly – to be honest and vulnerable.
Was your shortlisted collection shaped by particular experiences or feelings?
Colonisation, racism, illness, a bit of Covid – all the relaxing stuff.
Did you make any unexpected discoveries as you wrote?
The whole book was unexpected. I was writing another book called Giving Birth To My Father, which took ages. After a while (quite close to my deadline) I realised it wasn’t ready for the outside world. The Savage Coloniser Book had to come together really quickly, if I wanted it published for 2020. I knew I had a few poems that were very ‘2020’ lying about. I wrote to those poems in a short amount of time.
Do you like to talk about your poems or would you rather let them speak for themselves? Is there one poem where an introduction (say at a poetry reading) would fascinate the audience/ reader? Offer different pathways through the poem?
During poetry readings/ performances I used to think the poem should speak for itself but many poems really need an introduction, particularly when people are not experiencing them on the page.

Tusiata Avia, The Savagae Coloniser Book, Victoria University Press, 2020
Tusiata Avia is an acclaimed poet, performer and children’s writer. Her previous poetry collections are Wild Dogs Under My Skirt (2004; also staged as a theatre show, most recently Off-Broadway, winning the 2019 Outstanding Production of the Year), Bloodclot (2009) and the Ockham-shortlisted Fale Aitu | Spirit House (2016). Tusiata has held the Fulbright Pacific Writer’s Fellowship at the University of Hawai‘i in 2005 and the Ursula Bethell Writer in Residence at University of Canterbury in 2010. She was the 2013 recipient of the Janet Frame Literary Trust Award, and in 2020 was appointed a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to poetry and the arts.
Poetry Shelf review
Selina Tusitala Marsh’s review at ANZL
Poetry Shelf: Tusiata‘s ‘Love in the Time of Primeminiscinda’ (The Savage Coloniser Book)
Tusiata reads ‘Massacre’ (The Savage Coloniser Book)
Leilani Tamu review at KeteBooks
Faith Wilson review at RNZ National
Victoria University Press page
Ockham NZ Book Awards 2021shortlists here
Poetry Shelf noticeboard: Nina Mingya Powles launches Magnolia at Food Court Books

Seraph Press and Food Court Books invite you to come and celebrate the launch of Magnolia 木蘭 by Nina Mingya Powles.
When: Saturday 13 March, 3 pm
Where: Food Court Books, 84 Constable Street, Newtown, Wellington
Nina will read from Magnolia 木蘭 and copies will be for sale.
For every copy of Magnolia 木蘭 you buy at the launch you’ll also receive an extra special gift (while stock lasts): a gorgeous risograph print of ‘Last eclipse’, one of the poems in the collection, which Nina has printed herself.
About the book:
Shanghai, Aotearoa, Malaysia, London—all are places poet Nina Mingya Powles calls home and not-home; from each she can be homesick for another. A gorgeous bittersweet longing and hunger runs through the poems in this new collection from one of our most exciting poetic voices.
In Magnolia 木蘭 Powles explores her experience of being mixed-race and trying to find her way through multiple languages: English, Mandarin, Hakka, Māori. Powles uses every sense to take us on a journey through cities, food and even time, weaving her story with the stories of women from history, myth and film.
The gorgeous cover features an artwork by Kerry Ann Lee.
Magnolia 木蘭 is longlisted for the Ockham New Zealand Book Awards for the Mary and Peter Biggs Award for Poetry, and the UK edition was shortlisted for the Forward Prize for best first collection.
About the author:
Nina Mingya Powles is a poet, zinemaker and non-fiction writer of Malaysian-Chinese and Pākehā heritage, currently living in London. She is the author of a food memoir, Tiny Moons: A Year of Eating in Shanghai (The Emma Press, 2020), poetry box-set Luminescent (Seraph Press, 2017), and several poetry chapbooks and zines, including Girls of the Drift (Seraph Press, 2014). In 2018 she was one of three winners of the inaugural Women Poets’ Prize, and in 2019 won the Nan Shepherd Prize for Nature Writing. Nina has an MA in creative writing from Victoria University of Wellington and won the 2015 Biggs Family Prize for Poetry. She is the founding editor of Bitter Melon 苦瓜, a risograph press that publishes limited-edition poetry pamphlets by Asian writers. Her collection of essays, Small Bodies of Water, is forthcoming from Canongate Books in 2021.
For more information
Poetry Shelf noticeboard: Titus Books crowdfunding invitation
Titus Books is pre-selling three new poetry collections, by Richard
von Sturmer, Chris Holdaway and Scott Hamilton, to help cover the
costs involved in producing them.
This is in a sense a traditional subscription style of publishing,
advance selling the books, and also a new crowdfunding style, we will
send out to contributors copies of the books when they are published
and thank people inside the books by printing their names (if they
would like that). We will also include a gift publication made
especially to accompany this series.
If you would like to be involved – all contributions gratefully
received – please follow this link
There is more information about the books on the page, including the
book titles (as of yet without covers), and some options to get
involved.
Poetry Shelf noticeboard: The John McGivering Poetry Prize (judge Harry Ricketts)
THE KIPLING SOCIETY
FOUNDED 1927
Registered Charity No.278885
Hon Secretary: Michael Kipling
Bay Tree House, Doomsday Garden, Horsham, W. Sussex, RH13 6LB
email michaelrkipling@gmail.com
Echoes of ‘The Long Trail’: The John McGivering Poetry Prize
The Kipling Society is hosting a competition for poems inspired by Rudyard Kipling’s writings, on the theme of travel. The judge is Harry Ricketts, poet, critic, anthologist and biographer of Kipling.
Kipling was a magical phrase maker, who has contributed more expressions to our language than anyone since Shakespeare. He wrote in many voices, which remain a pleasure to read aloud, as the Kipling Society has found in our world-wide Zoom members’ readings during the pandemic, with readers from Britain, Europe, America, India, and New Zealand. The bard of the ‘Seven Seas’, whose finest poems voice the desire for ‘the long trail – the trail that is always new’ was all his life in love with global travel: ‘What should they know of England who only England know?’ He wrote of the delights of Australia, where ‘Through the great South Otway gums sings the great South Main’ (‘The Flowers’), of the dangerous ‘Rio run’, skirting icebergs that groan and shift, ‘Whaur, grindin’ like the Mills o’ God, goes by the big South Drift’ (‘McAndrew’s Hymn’) – and of course his beloved North India:
Parrots very busy in the trellised paper-vine,
And a high sun over Asia shouting “Rise and shine!” (“Jobson’s Amen”)
In this prize competition, enabled by the generosity of the late John McGivering, whose love and knowledge of Kipling have enriched our online New Reader’s Guide, we ask poets to draw inspiration from Kipling, not necessarily in imitation, but with something of his colour and rhythm and his fascination with people and places, as we travel this great and wonderful world.
First Prize £350, Second Prize £100, Third Prize £50. Entry fee £5. For the competition rules or enquiries, email KSwritingprize@gmail.com or visit here








