Category Archives: Uncategorized

Poetry Shelf noticeboard: A Clear Dawn goes on tour in SI

This week Alison Wong and Paula Morris are taking A Clear Dawn on a tour of the South Island! If you’re in Wanaka, Arrowtown, Dunedin or Invercargill, we’d love you to join us in celebrating this landmark anthology. Everyone is welcome and more event details can be found here

Poetry Shelf noticeboard: Sam Duckor-Jones launches Party Legend

Victoria University Press warmly invites you to the launch of

on Wednesday 16 June, 6pm 
at Crumpet, 109 Manners Street, Wellington

Party Legend
by Sam Duckor-Jones

Books available for sale courtesy of Food Court Books.

All welcome.

Poetry Shelf backlist: Min-a-rets 10

Min-a-rets 10, Compound Press, editor Sarah Jane Barnett

Poetry Shelf has put me in the sublime position of receiving pretty much every poetry book and journal published in Aotearoa NZ – but I never have enough time or energy to review everything. Yes I only review books I love, but I don’t get a chance to feature all of them. There is always a hopeful pile of books and journals that have enchanted me but that I have not yet shared. I guess it is even worse this year as I have cleared space for my own writing in the mornings and I don’t want to encroach upon that. I am really grateful that most poets don’t badger me and expect superhuman efforts on a blog that runs on the currency of love and my fluctuating energy levels. I have decided to make little returns to that hopeful stack and, every now and then, share something that you might want track it down.

I sometimes pick a poetry book hoping it will offer the right dose of rescue remedy – a mix of poetic inspiration along with heart and mind sustenance. My return to Min-a-rets 10 did exactly that. Poet Sarah Jane Barnett has edited an issue that is supremely satisfying. In her introduction she expresses anxiety at not being ‘cool’ or young enough to edit a journal that is to date cutting edge, experimental, younger rather older. But once she had read the 100 or so submissions, her fears were allayed. I totally agree with her summation of the Min-a-ret gathering:

In the end I had nothing to worry about. The poems I’ve selected are beautiful, painful, challenging, thought-provoking, heartbreaking and funny. They reminded me that good poems shine no matter their genre or when they were written. They make life feel intense and bright. While this issue includes mid-career poets, there’s definitely a new generation stepping forward, and I have admiration for their commitment to craft, and to sharing an authentic experience—to not conforming. That’s cool.

10 poets with art by Toyah Webb. A slender hand-bound object published by Compound Press. Within a handful of pages, the poetry prompts such diverse reactions, it is like the very best reading vacation. I laughed out loud, I stalled and mused, I felt my heart crack. Above all I felt inspired to write. That exquisite moment when you read the poetry of others that is so good you feel compelled to write a poem.

essa may ranapiri has written a counting poem from tahi to iwa, with deep-rooted personal threads that underline there are myriad ways to count self and the world and experience. Memory. Then the honeyed currents of Elizabeth Welsh’s mother poem that free floats because motherhood cannot be limited. And yes Erik Kennedy made me laugh inside and then laugh out loud as the ending took me by surprise. Aimee-Jane Anderson-O’Connor transports me from the optician leaning in to staring at strangers to probability to ‘wow’. I am so loving the little leaps that intensify the scene.

Oh the aural genius of a Louise Wallace poem, especially when she pivots upon the word ‘trying’.

Or Joan Fleming’s line ‘Some confessions stick like stove filth’. Or Travis Tate: ‘Love is the sky, pitched black, radiant dot / of white to guide young hearts to this spot’. Or Eliana Gray’s: ‘We can’t save the people we love from drowning when it / happens on sand’.

Two list poems from Jackson Nieuwland, a witty serious funny precursor to their sublime award-winning collection I am a human being (Compound Press). And finally the laugh-out loud glorious prose poem by Rachel O’Neill where reason becomes raisin: ‘If only there was one good raisin left in the world, you think.’

Read this body-jolting issue and you will surely be inspired to get a subscription.

Compound Press page

Poetry Shelf noticeboard: Before I Go Home – poetry reading at Food Court Books

Kia Mau Festival is excited to announce ‘Before I Go Home’, a night of poetry celebrating migrant voices of Pōneke, at Food Court Books on the 12th of June, 6pm. Curated by Wellington poets Khadro Mohamed and Ronia Ibrahim, Before I Go Home features popular and emerging Pōneke poets from migrant backgrounds, including Chris Tse, Vanessa Crofsky, Emma Shi, Nuzha Salem, Areez Katki and Adriana Che Ismail. Join us in the heart of Newtown for a rich and diverse poetic experience, that brings the diverse voices of migrant and tauiwi identities to the forefront of Aotearoa poetry.

See here for details

Poetry Shelf noticeboard: Michelle Elvy launches new book

Note from Michelle:

the other side of better is published by Ad Hoc in the UK, the same publisher who produced the everrumle in 2019.  As with the everrumle, I’ve been lucky to work with an artist for the cover design. Wellington-based Jennifer Halli will be at the Dunedin launch on Friday, June 18, for a joint reading and art show. I’m attaching the poster for this event, so you can see her beautiful artwork (and you can find more about the artist here). 


I’m also excited to be doing readings in Auckland (July 02, introduced by Paula Morris) and Christchurch (July 08, introduced by James Norcliffe), as well as online readings in July, for friends and colleagues who are not in Aotearoa New Zealand. More about those coming soon… 


To pre-order the book or find out more, please see the publisher’s page. They ship worldwide! And in New Zealand, you can find the book at Nationwide or in book shops near you as of mid-June.

Poetry Shelf noticeboard: Sunday Poetry at Time Out – host Chris Tse

Event by Chris Tse, Time Out Bookstore

Sunday, June 27, 2021 at 5:30

Price: Free · Duration: 1 hr

Wrap up your weekend with a poetry reading featuring an effervescent and refreshing six-pack of poets: Lily Holloway, Nathan Joe, Ria Masae, Samuel Te Kani, Chris Tse, and Angela Zhang

Poetry Shelf noticeboard: Caselberg International Poetry Prize 2021 now open

This year’s Judge is Majella Cullinane.

The competition opens Tuesday 1 June and closes on Saturday 31 July 2021. Entries are judged blind. First Prize is $500 (plus one-week stay at the Caselberg house at Broad Bay, Dunedin). Second Prize is $250; and there are up to 5 Highly-Commended awards (no monetary prizes).

Go here for details