Poetry Shelf connections: takahē 98 goes online today

 

 

 

He aha te mea nui o te ao
What is the most important thing in the world?
He tangata, he tangata, he tangata
It is the people, it is the people, it is the people

Kia ora e hoa,

Exceptional times call for exceptional measures, and because we have so much exceptional talent packed into our 98th issue, we’ve made the call to publish this edition online, rather than panic our printer and the postie.

This little gem was all set to go to the printer some weeks ago, but the world is a different place now. So we’re switching around our print and online edition and published this little beauty to our website for your reading pleasure. takahē 99 will be our first print issue for this year, all going well (fingers, feathers and fur crossed).

takahē 98 has perfect prose from our guest poet Tim Upperton, fabulous flash from guest writer Elizabeth Morton, and pages of plenty from our incredible contributors. Tiffany Thornley’s artwork comes alive on-screen, and the accompanying essay from Jane Zusters takes us back to the Women’s Art Movement and a bitterly cold 1970s winter.

So grab your favourite tipple, the good crackers and a wheel of cheese, and settle in for a read that will make you happy to be at home. Or bookmark the site, take a bite here and there, and nip back once the magic has fully settled into your soul.

Whether you nibble, gnaw or annihilate it in one sitting, takahē 98 is the nourishment you’ve been craving.

Kia kaha, and keep in touch.

Please feel free to forward this on to all your creative friends, and get in touch any time if you have any questions.

check out takahē
He aha te mea nui o te ao
What is the most important thing in the world?
He tangata, he tangata, he tangata
It is the people, it is the people, it is the people

Kia ora e hoa,

Exceptional times call for exceptional measures, and because we have so much exceptional talent packed into our 98th issue, we’ve made the call to publish this edition online, rather than panic our printer and the postie.

This little gem was all set to go to the printer some weeks ago, but the world is a different place now. So we’re switching around our print and online edition and published this little beauty to our website for your reading pleasure. takahē 99 will be our first print issue for this year, all going well (fingers, feathers and fur crossed).

takahē 98 has perfect prose from our guest poet Tim Upperton, fabulous flash from guest writer Elizabeth Morton, and pages of plenty from our incredible contributors. Tiffany Thornley’s artwork comes alive on-screen, and the accompanying essay from Jane Zusters takes us back to the Women’s Art Movement and a bitterly cold 1970s winter.

So grab your favourite tipple, the good crackers and a wheel of cheese, and settle in for a read that will make you happy to be at home. Or bookmark the site, take a bite here and there, and nip back once the magic has fully settled into your soul.

Whether you nibble, gnaw or annihilate it in one sitting, takahē 98 is the nourishment you’ve been craving.

 

Check out takahē online

Poetry Shelf connections: NZ publishers pick some comfort books

 

 

This is my sixth comfort book list –  lists that use comfort as a starting point and then veer off as the contributors make selections. To date: poets, fiction writers, non-fiction writers, children’s authors and invited New Zealanders. The books are much loved and are as likely to startle and provoke as they are to soothe and provide solace.

I have been musing on how my reading habits have changed. My usual focus has shattered and whereas I would spend whole days in the grip of a book I can’t seem to do that at the moment. I graze. Poetry works for me. Literary journals are good grazing ground. A single poem can hold my attention for ages.

For some reason I am compelled to write. I have poems turning in my head like little snowballs. They are there in the middle of the night when I can’t sleep, and they are with me during the day.

But books are essential. I am still reading Richard Powles’ magnificent The Overstory at a snail’s pace and just loving it.

 

This week I invited Publishers and a few others involved in the industry. Very fitting when bookshops will be able to process online sales next week.

 

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Harriet Allen (Fiction Publisher, Penguin Random House)

Despite history reminding us that we never learn, I also find it a solace that we persevere and continue to connect. I’m not the first person to have made that observation, nor will I be the last; that’s the nature of history. But because of it, Neil Oliver’s A History of Ancient Britain has been much in my mind recently. This is partly because it is such an excellent book and partly because it explores how humanity has come together and been distanced in varied ways for millennia. I read the book over the Christmas break while in Britain. During the lockdown, I have had more than enough manuscripts to keep me occupied, but have also been turning to other books on ancient history, but only to be disappointed – Oliver has set a high benchmark.

I’m no doubt falsifying by oversimplifying, but he shows an interesting fluctuation in the social interaction between ancient people in Britain. Hunter gatherers had ventured into what was a peninsula before an ice age chased them out. When it eventually receded, new generations travelled north, hunting and gathering. Because there were so few people, Oliver believes that special places such as Stonehenge developed to bring them together, to observe the winter solstice, to meet up, trade, find spouses and celebrate.

The discovery of bronze resulted in more effective tools, which improved farming and led to larger settlements and an increasing population. When iron was discovered, these populations created better weaponry as they fought over land, food and resources. This was the time that hillforts were built, complete with their grain pits, so tribes could lock themselves in and shut others out.

Then came the Romans, some tribes welcoming them in, others trying to repel them. But throughout all these periods, although the peninsula had become an island, people were crossing the sea, intermarrying, trading with civilisations far afield, sharing ideas, art and skills.

There are many fascinating observations in this book, such as who controlled the changing resources at different times and how that influenced social interaction. You can appreciate this book from a safe hemisphere away, but I loved reading it while visiting some of the places mentioned (from Stonehenge to Danbury Hill Fort to Bath Roman baths – all impressive structures in different ways). I took it for granted then that (if I saved enough money and leave) I could travel there, but that was BC-19. Now things have changed, even my visit, although only a few months ago, was to a Britain that no longer exists: the virus has now scarred it.

At one point, Oliver talks about Stone Age hand axes, saying that until you can hold one you cannot appreciate how perfectly they fit the hand at rest. All very well for you to say that, I thought, knowing the chance of me ever holding one was next to zero.

About a week later, we were at Fishbourne Museum in Chichester, viewing the stunning Roman mosaic floors. They also had a tour of their archives building, where all archaeological finds in the region are sent to be cleaned, catalogued, stored and loaned to museums. As this process was explained, we were handed around objects from the collection, such as an exquisite Samian-ware dish.

But what sent me tingling were two Stone Age hand axes. Oliver’s book leapt off the page. Just as he had described, each axe fitted exactly within the palm, letting my fingers rest in descending notches. One had been made for the right hand, the other for the left. Each had once fitted snuggly in a Stone Age hand, as it was knapped into shape and wielded as an everyday tool. Although we may have been separated by millions of years, I felt an incredible connection to the makers. It was a temporally distant handshake. The distance made it all the more miraculous.

 

 

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Fergus Barrowman (Publisher, Victoria University Press)

My comfort reading is serial crushes – over the past year, Patricia Beer, Julia Blackburn, Alice McDermott, and since February when the significance of Covid-19 began to come into focus, Natalia Ginzburg. The tipping point was All Our Yesterdays, a novel set in internal exile in WW2 Italy. It’s teenage Anna’s story, but this is a sentence that especially moved me to Twitter: ‘Cenzo Rena poured himself out some more brandy and slipped on his waterproof and went out into the bright morning, with the bells ringing loudly and little shining aeroplanes high up in the sky.’ You’ll have to read it to appreciate the significance. The memoir Family Lexicon and the essays in The Little Virtues are vital – especially ‘Winter in the Abruzzi’ and ‘My Vocation’. In lockdown, the first book I was able to forget myself in was The Manzoni Family, a long non-fiction epistolary novel about the author of I promessi sposi and his family. Manzoni’s glittering career and the Risorgimento play out in the background, but the book’s substance is what the family wrote to one another about over 150 years – constant illness and occasional epidemics. We should all read whatever gives us comfort.

 

 

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Sarah Bolland (Creative Director, The Cuba Press)

When I’m in need of solace, there’s only one reliable way to achieve it: murder.

Only of the literary sort, of course, and preferably cosy. The first book I read during this lockdown was The Pale Horse by Agatha Christie. Growing up, half a shelf of the hall bookcase was devoted to her, so she comes with a sense of safety and familiarity, even if it’s a book I’ve never read before. You know there’ll be a body (of someone you’re not very attached to), you know there’ll be clues (that you could theoretically work out) and you know that by the end everything will make sense and the world between the covers will be restored to order. It’s comforting to believe things can be that easy, once in a while.

There’s a great episode of the Allusionist podcast that delves more into ‘the literature of convalescence’ – not just for illness, but all kinds of wanting to feel better.

 

 

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Sam Elworthy (Publisher, Auckland University Press)

For comfort right now, believe it or not, I reckon the first volume of Robert Caro’s biography of Lyndon Johnson, The Path to Power  (just finished) does the job. It’s just a deep insight into real politics – how it works; how it can help people; how it goes wrong. What we’re dealing with right now requires political solutions. We’re fortunate in New Zealand to have the politics we do; the US is unfortunately right now to have the politics they do. The LBJ biography shows how to tell one from the other.

 

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Catriona Ferguson (Directory Publishers Association)

The dark and knotty novels of Agatha Christie have regularly offered me safe haven in troubled times. They provide both distraction and comfort; I think it’s the combination of sharp plotting, absorbing characters and the way in which they invoke a slightly remote world that it’s easy to escape into.

Another crime writer I lean towards is Sophie Hannah who has been handed Agatha Christie’s literary baton and so far has produced four new mysteries featuring the much-loved moustachioed detective Hercule Poirot.

If you prefer your crime more contemporary then I recommend any of Hannah’s other novels; I’m currently deep in Haven’t They Grown, a tricksy, compelling book that plays with truth and logic.

 

 

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Sally Greer (Director, Beatnik Publishing)

That was a difficult task because there are a number of titles that readily fulfil that brief of books that have given me comfort. I’d have to say the upcoming Wild Kinship: Conversations with Conscious Entrepreneurs by Monique Hemmingson is a book that’s given me quite a lot to think about going forward. It’s not only inspiring but yeah comforting, knowing that you can do something yourself to make a difference. There’s a quote by the writer and philosopher Aldous Huxley on the back of the book – ‘There is only one corner of the universe you can be certain of improving, and that’s your own self.’

I think in New Zealand we’re definitely living that, everyone pitching in during this incredibly tough time. Monique Hemmingson has met with all these inspiring conscious small business owners. The bottom line isn’t purely about profit and margins, competition and greed. The focus is on community and collaboration, it really is an amazing conversation about social capital. It’s so timely for what’s happening here and around the world.

 

 

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Jenny Hellen (Publisher, Allen & Unwin)
To be honest, when lockdown was announced I instinctively felt I needed to read something ‘easy’, engrossing and escapist and so I bought Marian Keyes’ Grown Ups. It was perfect. Assured writing, laughs, dramatics, tension. It distracted me from the horrors of Covid. Not sure I would call it soothing. Books that fall into that category for me are The Year of Magical Thinking by Joan Didion, Lanny by Max Porter, Someone’s Wife by Linda Burgess: all exquisite writers who have the power to take you away from where you are right now. Oh and in the middle of the night when you can’t sleep, I can heartily recommend Bill Bryson’s The Road to Little Dribbling – gently amusing walking tour of England, along with The Dutch House by Ann Patchett and Olive, Again by Elizabeth Strout.

 

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Roger Hickin (Publisher, Cold Hub Press)

In Water for Days of Thirst, a selection of poems by the Nicaraguan poet Blanca Castellón, which I translated and published in 2016, there is a poem which seems particularly appropriate in any consideration of literature as a storehouse of solace:

 

Birth

In the midst of today’s death

a poem was born

alone

so alone

its cactus body

stores water

for days of thirst.

 

 

But the book I’ve returned to again and again over nearly fifty years is Hear us O Lord from heaven thy dwelling place, a posthumously published (1961) collection of stories by Malcolm Lowry: mostly for the lyrical, meditative 68-page story, ‘The Forest Path to the Spring’. Intended by Lowry as the Paradiso of a never-realised Dantesque trilogy, itself part of an even grander design, this was an attempt “to write of human happiness in terms of enthusiasm and high seriousness usually reserved for catastrophe and tragedy”. Largely autobiographical, like much of Lowry’s writing, it is an account of an alcoholic ex-seaman/jazz musician’s life with his wife as squatters in a shack on Vancouver Inlet in the 1940s and early 50s; an evocation of simple virtues in the face of destruction; a record of the epiphanies and exultations of a man who learns through suffering to simplify his life. Even if the writing is sometimes a little too lush & teeters on the brink of sentimentality, from its opening sentence–– “At dusk, every evening, I used to go through the forest to the spring for water”–– ‘The Forest Path to the Spring’ is a profoundly comforting work.

 

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Chris Holdaway (Publisher, Compound Press)

American poet Douglas Crase published The Revisionist in 1981: a book of such utterly sweeping poems that must have been almost impossible to read for their dazzling sincerity in a time of devoutly post-modern irony. His writing has been available only marginally for decades, but last year Carcanet reissued (as it were) The Revisionist so now you too can experience reading the first lines and getting your breath knocked out so hard that everything seems possible:

 

If I could raise rivers, I’d raise them
Across the mantle of your past: old headwaters
Stolen, oxbows high and dry while new ones form,
A sediment of history rearranged. If I could unlock
The lakes, I’d spill their volume over the till
I know you cultivate: full accumulations swept away,
The habit of prairies turned to mud. If I had glaciers,
I’d carve at the stony cliffs of your belief:
Logical mountains lowered notch by notch, erratics
Dropped for you to stumble on. Earthquakes, and I’d
Seize your experience at its weakest edge: leveled
Along a fault of memories. Sunspots, I’d cloud
Your common sense; tides, and I’d drown its outlines
With a weight of water they could never bear.
If I had hurricanes, I’d worry your beaches
Into ambiguity: barrier islands to collect them
In one spot and in another the sudden gut
That sucks them loose to revolve in dispersion with
The waves. If I had frost, I’d shatter the backbone
Of your thought: an avalanche of gravel, a storm
Of dust. And if I could free volcanoes, I’d tap
The native energies you’ve never seen: counties
Of liquid rock to cool in summits you’d have to
Reckon from. If I could unroll a winter of time
When these were done, I’d lay around your feet
In endless fields where you could enter and belong,
A place returning and a place to turn to whole.

 

 

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Nicola Legat (Publisher, Massey University Press, Te Papa Press)

I wasn’t going to read the new Elizabeth Strout. I loved Olive Kitteridge and My Name is Lucy Barton but, you know how it is, there are lots of other authors and books to get through. But then, the day before lockdown, I rushed into The Women’s Bookshop to grab some books for the weeks ahead. Carole’s book shelves had been pretty well cleaned out in the stampede of the days before but there was still a modest pile of Olive, Again on the centre table and so I bought one. The next day lockdown began, and my street’s newly established WhatsApp network sprang to life as we asked each other questions: Has anyone been to Countdown yet, and how long is the queue? Do you have flour? Yeast? How do we help the residents in the halfway house? Don’t forget to bang pots outside at 7pm on Saturday night. Slowly distinct personalities revealed themselves: practical people, compassionate people, creative people, jokey people, sometimes cranky people. We were all in this together. What we had in our street was what we had and we would get through. A lot like Crosby, Maine, where Olive Kitteridge is advancing into old age, still blundering through life, irascible, disappointed, scornful, lonely. But also capable of compassion, her roots down deep in the soil of her complex little community. Over the years she had given a good deal to it, and for all its flaws and shortcomings it could still sustain her. A lot like us.

 

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Julia Marshall (Publisher, Gecko Press)

Normally as a publisher I would be careful not to choose a book we have published ourselves, but at this moment, if we are talking comfort at a time when I swing between optimism and despair, I want to remind myself of why we do this. For me, there are some key books that I think the world is better with than without: All the Dear Little Animals is one, by Ulf Nilsson and Eva Eriksson, Duck, Death and the Tulip, by Wolf Erlbruch, Seasons by Blexbolex – all good for slowing me down, encouraging a bit of breathing perhaps, as good for me as a glass of water or a cake. (If I wanted cake, I would read Detective Gordon.)

The fact that I am reading at all is a comfort as I sometimes worry about not being able to see – but I don’t read for comfort. I use food for that. I just read, often whatever is next on the shelf. I do like something different to what I read last. At the moment I would like next, if I had it, some Dickens, for the pace, humanity and the writing. I am also reading cookbooks.

 

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Mary McCallum, (Publisher, Mākaro Press and The Cuba Press

 

Sincerity by Carol Ann Duffy (Picador)

My son Paul gave me Carol Ann Duffy’s Sincerity for Christmas. She was UK poet laureate until last year. The book is bright and sparkling and I started to read. Then news came through that my uncle Nigel had died on Christmas Eve. I’d just read a line that spoke of ‘The small o in love and loss.’ It felt like the perfect line, the perfect compression. I shared it with my grieving aunt and cousins. I said it when we raised our glasses at the family Christmas toast.

At Easter, my aunt Chrys, on the other side of the family, died in her rest home in Devon. Not from Covid-19, but the virus meant she couldn’t be hospitalised. Just after my dad rang with the news, it started raining hard, and then it hailed. Sincerity was sitting on my piano, where the music goes. I opened it randomly to (I kid you not) a poem called ‘Garden before Rain’, which ends: ‘It is like love, / the garden yearning to be touched / by the expert fingers of rain.’

And there’s another poem too I’ve found, which I read when I’m missing my two children living in the UK, especially at this time. It’s called ‘Empty Nest’ and includes the lines: ‘I knew mothering, but not this other thing / which hefts my heart each day.’ It ends, as this poet so often does, with an uplift: ‘From a local church, bells like a spelling. / And the evening star like a text. / And then what next …’ Somehow Duffy always has the words for it, whatever it is. And consoles in the telling.

 

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Catherine Montgomery (Publisher, Canterbury University Press)

Books give me comfort. Full stop. It’s a blanket statement about my favourite form of security blanket. Reading in bed offers the greatest comfort (even if frowned upon as poor ‘sleep hygiene’), preferably hemmed in by a couple of cats (even worse sleep hygiene).

My stockpiling before the lockdown was focused less on the pantry and more on the bookshelves – it’s not that I don’t love to eat too, but it seemed that supermarkets would still be open and bookshops wouldn’t. Lyttelton’s second-hand bookshop, a local treasure, had contributed to my sense of ‘reading security’ by providing the four volumes of Anthony Powell’s Dance to The Music of Time, and from the University Bookshop, in those surreal frantic minutes before the doors were locked for an indefinite period, I picked up a reassuringly hefty copy of Hilary Mantel’s The Mirror and The Light. There was comfort even in the anticipation of reading them.

There are so many other times when books have been a particular support to me. I arrived in Christchurch from the UK in late 1995, completely ignorant of Aotearoa’s culture and history, and of everyday Kiwi customs and idioms. Developing a sense of belonging is a long journey, and reading contemporary fiction is one of the ways in. I’ll always be grateful to New Zealand authors for being my guides at the start, amongst them Patricia Grace, Kirsty Gunn, Paula Morris, Emily Perkins and CK Stead. As we’re often told, an interest in other people and their lives is a great antidote to shyness and anxiety, and while I read them purely for pleasure these writers fuelled my curiosity and gave me a chance to start connecting with my new home quietly and at my own pace.

Despite that opening generalisation, I admit that books aren’t a panacea. (See Karen Hay’s advice on Poetry Shelf last week that when you need solace or comfort the best thing is to write something yourself.) Books weren’t able to comfort or even distract me from the acute pain of grief when my mother died; perhaps that’s as it should be. (I’ve since found a book about compassion as a path through suffering which has helped in the aftermath – A Fearless Heart by Thupten Jinpa, principal English translator for the Dalai Lama.) Even when the grief had modulated some years later, it was still asking a lot of fiction to provide enjoyment, let alone comfort. Now, as then, when I can’t cope with anything too serious or too flippant or too poignant, in the words of the late Clive James, ‘I thank heaven for small mercies. The first of these is Rumpole’.

During my long ‘convalescence’ after bereavement, John Mortimer’s comic stories about the crumpled, cynical, wise and witty defence barrister were wonderful comfort fare. There’s an underlying melancholy to the stories, too, but kindness and fairness are at their core. While each story is discrete, there was comfort in developing a deep familiarity with the characters and their environs as I progressed through the two omnibus editions. Sam Leith’s introduction to one collection puts it much better: ‘One of the great joys of these stories – like Wodehouse’s, setting a time and place in aspic – is the deeply consolatory joy of familiarity. You settle into Rumpole’s world with the same easeful sigh you imagine Rumpole emitting as he settles into his place at Pommeroy’s. Each story is different, but each story is also, deep down, the same. Each twists in an eminently satisfactory way’.

And in a sort of reverse-Proustian response, reading the stories connects me with comforting childhood tastes and smells – tomato soup (canned) and buttered toast (sliced white loaf): it’s lunchtime in the mid-70s, I’m ‘off sick’ from school, propped up in front of the TV, with the soup and toast on a tray, completely absorbed in an episode of the BBC’s ‘Rumpole of the Bailey’.

 

 

 

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Waimatua Morris (Sales and Marketing Manager, Huia Press)

 

The first book I chose is Huia Short Stories 13 which is a collection of short stories from the 2019 Pikihuia Awards for Māori writers. I chose this book because it reminded me that we have a huge talent of local Māori writers that we should continue to support. This collection of superb storytelling will touch your feelings, make you think, open up new understandings and entertain you.

The second book I picked is Legacy by Whiti Hereaka. This is a thrilling and realistic novel that follows a modern-day teenager, Riki Pūweto, back in time to World War One where he finds himself serving as his great-great-grandfather in te Māori Contingent. This story reminds us of our tipuna who stood on the front line for Aotearoa. During this lockdown, front line staff have also played a crucial role to ensure our safety and comfort. I chose this story to acknowledge those who have made a sacrifice for the sake of others.

 

 

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Helen Rickerby (Publisher, Seraph Press)

A few years ago my father was told that he was going to die within one to three years, depending on what kind of a rare disease he had. He phoned me up immediately to tell me, and of course I immediately burst into tears. I happened to be in a café with my friend B having an after-lunch coffee. B told me later that the waiting staff gave him really dirty looks, assuming that he was the cause of my grief.

My dad has passed the three year mark, and we’re pretty sure now he never had either form of that disease at all, but in the weeks following his ‘death sentence’ I found the worst time for me was that time between going to bed and falling asleep. That time when there is nothing to distract you from your fears. Except I did find something to distract me. I started reading books on my Kobo, which has a backlight, so I could read in the dark while my husband slept beside me. What I mostly read was books by Richard Holmes, a biographer. I focused on his books that collect shorter biographical essays – especially Footsteps: Adventures of a Romantic Biographer, Sidetracks: Explorations of a Romantic Biographer and This Long Pursuit: Reflections of a Romantic Biographer. These were the perfect things for me to relax into in the dark, little thoughtful windows into other people’s lives, guided by a warm and calming voice. Those times in the dark came to be a joy to me, something I looked forward to.

More recently, when sad, an understanding friend gave me a wonderful gift: The Crying Book by Heather Christle. It’s a sort of hybrid – kind of poetry, kind of essay, kind of memoir. It goes deeply into crying – the emotions and the science and the stories, without ever straying into self indulgence. I tried to read it in snatches – it was so beautiful I didn’t want it to end, but still I devoured it. It gave me comfort, and the hope I might be able to make something beautiful too.

 

 

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Rachel Scott (Publisher, Otago University Press)

Looking at what others have written I realise I’m not really doing books-for-solace. No doubt there is something deeply wrong in my psyche. Jigsaws and chocolate are solace. My reading is escapist – transporting me to a completely different world that sucks me right in. I’m currently halfway through the third in the Wolf Hall trilogy by Hilary Mantel – The Mirror and the Light. The writing is original and searingly evocative. Not all of it is comfortable – Tudor times were tough, make no mistake – and real life assaults all your senses as the story unfolds. Solace it is not. Most memorable line so far ‘… the air as damp as if the afternoon had been rubbed with snails’. Marvellous stuff.

 

 

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Roger Steele (Publisher, Steele Roberts)

Twenty years ago I was interviewed on the radio about being a publisher and mentioned inter alia that if I was marooned on a desert island, two books I’d like with me would be a comprehensive dictionary, and the complete works of James K. Baxter. Listening in, Jacquie Baxter (aka J.C. Sturm) was well pleased. Despite all the raruraru he caused her, she remained a staunch advocate of Jim to her dying day.

Nowadays I wouldn’t take either book; I know enough words, and enough Baxter, to get by. Instead, I’d take Jacquie’s complete works. They don’t exist as a single volume yet, but will in the not-too-distant future. There’s so much to admire and reflect on in Jacquie’s stories (e.g. House of the Talking Cat) and poems (e.g. Dedications). They’re always rich and refreshing to come back to, and they say so much about her life, and the Aotearoa New Zealand she knew. Not that it’s always comfortable reading, of course, but that’s part of the point.

Another book I’d take is a favourite children’s one, The Conquerers by David McKee. It’s an entertaining allegory about a general who takes his army to conquer all the countries around him. Eventually there is only one small country left to vanquish, but this one does not resist, instead welcoming the soldiers – with unexpected results. It’s a story that gives hope, so could hardly be more timely at the moment.

 

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Mary Varnham (Publisher, AWA Press)

I’ve been spending whatever spare time I have in lockdown (while still working full-time from home) reading Serhii Plokhy’s book Chernobyl, which won the Baillie Prize in 2018. It may seem masochistic to read a book about a disaster during a disaster but it’s oddly reassuring since, 34 years after that horrendous nuclear meltdown, life goes on in the former USSR. And that Chernobyl led to the break-up of that repressive society, just as Covid-19 will shake our world into new patterns and power structures. However, I still can’t get this sentence out of my mind:”If the other three reactors of the Chernobyl power plant had been damaged by the explosion of the first, then hardly any living and breathing organisms would have remained on the planet.” Thank you to the brave and wise people fighting Covid 19 for all of us – for life.

 

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Melanee Winder (Director, Hatchette NZ)

I spent the first week of lockdown in a tailspin and was completely unable to concentrate on anything for more than five minutes. I did, as always, have a bedtime book on the go but I would be hard pressed to tell you what it was called (it was crime, there was an unreliable narrator- and reader). I then played kindle roulette for a few days where I read whatever I stumbled upon on my kindle – lots of manuscripts for books publishing in 2021 and beyond. If I didn’t recognise the author or title it was even more of adventure and I’d often read a couple of chapters trying to work it out; is it commercial (will she kidnap him), is it crime (will she cut him up into tiny pieces) or is it literary (will she paint him and fall in love with his daughter)?

Once my brain had calmed down I then started on my TBR pile with gusto. Where the Crawdads Sing by Delia Owens was the perfect isolation read – clever enough to focus my thoughts but not so clever that it was exhausting. Owens took me out of my world and into that of a feisty woman surviving in the North Carolina marshland. I loved it but weirdly then found I had a real need to read a NZ author. Vincent O’Sullivan’s All This By Chance was every bit as good as the reviews had promised, the story moved around the world and spanned many years, I loved that the writing demanded my attention and in turn this book completely grounded me.

I am currently back in the world of feisty women and grisly crime, my happy place.

 

kia kaha

keep well

keep imagining

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Poetry Shelf connections: Kim Meredith’s ‘Keeping tabs’

 

 

 

                                                Keeping tabs

 

 

 

As though it’s any other day

I think about what to wear

later at the kitchen counter

browser open, the world at

my fingertips, make my way

across the globe, notice the

earth holding its breath like

a child under water, for the

first time. Eyes closed tight.

Heart thumping in its chest.

Cheeks bursting. Searching

through half light, reaching

out towards the sun, white

clouds, drawn across  blue

sky. Gather my wits. Draw

breath, closing all tabs.

Find myself at the stove

pour water in the kettle.

Making tea as though it’s

just any other day.

 

Kim Meredith

 

 

Kim Meredith (Samoan, Tokelauan, and Portuguese descent). Her poetry and short stories are founded on reclaiming space for the Pasifika female narrative and have been published in Aotearoa, Hawaii and Mexico. She has collaborated extensively with partner Kingsley Spargo performing to audiences in New Zealand and China. She is co-producing an upcoming album on spoken word and soundscapes ‘Swimming Toward the Sun’ due for release later this year.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Poetry Shelf connections: celebrating Landfall 238 with a review and audio gathering

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Landfall 238 edited by Emma Neale  (Otago University Press)

 

I am finding literary journals very satisfying at the moment. They suit my need to read in short bursts throughout the day. Landfall 238 came out last year but the gold nuggets keep me returning. Is our reading behaviour changing during lockdown? I read incredibly slowly. I read the same poem more than once over the course of a week.

Helen Llendorf’s magnificent ‘Johanna Tells Me to Make a Wish’ is a case in point. It is slow and contemplative, conversational and luminous with physical detail. She starts with chickens, she stays with chickens, she intrudes upon herself with long parentheses. It feels like a poem of now in that way slows right down to absorb what is close to home.

 

 

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Landfall 238 also includes results from the Kathleen Grattan Award for Poetry 2019, with judge’s report by Jenny Bornholdt; results and winning essays from the Landfall Essay Competition 2019, with judge’s report by Emma Neale; results from the Caselberg Trust International Poetry Prize 2019, with judge’s report by Dinah Hawken.

Tobias Buck and Nina Mingya Powles’s winning essays are terrific. Two essays that in different ways, both moving and exquisitely written, show distinctive ways of feeling at home in one’s skin and navigating prejudice. Both have strong personal themes at the core but both stretch wider into other fascinations. Would love to read all the placed essays!

 

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I also want to applaud Landfall on its ongoing commitment to reviewing local books, both in the physical book and in Landfall Review Online. Review pages whether in print or on our screens seem like an increasingly endangered species. Landfall continues to invite an eclectic group of reviewers to review a diverse range of books.

 

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To celebrate this gold-nugget issue – I have invited a handful of poets to read one of their poems in the issue.

Make a cup of tea or a short black this morning, or pour a glass of wine this evening, and nestle into this sublime poetry gathering. I just love the contoured effects on me as I listen. I have got to hear poets I have loved for ages but also new voices that I am eager to hear and read more from.

 

Welcome to the Landfall 238 audio gathering!

 

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Louise Wallace

 

 

Louise Wallace reads ‘Tired Mothers’

 

Louise Wallace is the author of three collections of poetry published by Victoria University Press, most recently Bad Things. She is the founder and editor of Starling, and is looking forward to resuming a PhD in Creative Writing. Her days in lockdown are filled with visits to the park, bubbles, playdough, drawing, and reading the same handful of books over and over with her young son who she loves very much.

 

 

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Cerys Fletcher

 

 

Cerys reads ‘Bus Lament’

 

Cerys Fletcher (she/her) is in her first year at Te Herenga Waka, splitting her time between Te Whanganui-a-Tara and her home city, Ōtautahi. When possible, she frequents open mics and handmakes poetry zines. She was a finalist in the 2018 National Schools Poetry Awards and the winner of the Environment Canterbury Poems on Buses competition in 2019. She has been published in Landfall and A Fine Line. She does NOT like men who hit on you while you’re making their coffee. She is online & probably wants to talk to you (instagram: @cerys_is_tired. email: cerysfabulousfletcher@gmail.com).

 

 

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Rachel O’Neill

 

 

Rachel reads ‘The place of the travelling face’

 

Rachel O’Neill is a writer, filmmaker and artist based in Te Whanganui-a-Tara, Aotearoa. Their debut book One Human in Height (Hue & Cry Press) was published in 2013. They were awarded a 2018 SEED Grant (NZWG/NZFC) to develop a feature film and held a 2019 Emerging Writers Residency at the Michael King Writers Centre. Recent poems appear in Sport 49, Haunts by Salty and Food Court, and Ōrongohau | Best New Zealand Poems 2019.

 

 

 

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Peter Le Baige

 

 

Peter reads ‘what she knows’

 

Peter Le Baige has been writing and performing poetry since the first session of the legendary ‘Poetry Live’ weekly poetry readings in Auckland in 1981. He has published two collections of his very early work, ‘Breakers’ 1979, and ‘Street hung with daylit moon’, 1983, and whilst living abroad for 23 years, mostly in Asia and China in particular, has continued to write. He has been previously published in Landfall and was one of the cast for the ‘Pyschopomp’ poetry theatre piece at Auckland’s Fringe Festival in 2019.

 

 

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Jenny Powell

 

 

Jenny reads ‘Not All Colours Are Beautiful’

 

Jenny Powell is a Dunedin poet. Her latest collection of poems is South D Poet Lorikeet (Cold Hub Press, 2017). She is currently working on a new collection based on New Zealand artist, Rita Angus.

 

 

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Annie Villiers

 

 

 

Annie Villiers reads ‘Bloody Awful’

 

Annie Villiers is a writer and poet who works in Dunedin and lives in Central Otago. She has published three books; two in collaboration with artist John Z Robinson and a novel. She is currently working on a travel memoir and a poetry collection.

 

 

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Iona Winter

 

 

Iona reads ‘Portal to the stars’

 

Iona Winter writes in hybrid forms exploring the landscapes between oral and written words. Her work is created to be performed, and has been widely published and anthologised. She is the author of two collections then the wind came (2018) and Te Hau Kāika (2019). Iona is of Waitaha, Kāi Tahu and Pākehā descent, and lives on the East Otago Coast.

 

 

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Stacey Teague

 

 

 

Stacey reads ‘Kurangaituku’

 

Stacey Teague, Ngāti Maniapoto/Ngāpuhi, is a writer from Tamaki Makaurau currently living in Te Whanganui-a-Tara. She is the poetry editor for Scum Mag, has her Masters in Creative Writing from the International Institute of Modern Letters, and has three chapbooks: Takahē (Scrambler Books, 2015), not a casual solitude (Ghost City Press, 2017) and hoki mai (If A Leaf Falls Press, 2020). Tweets @staceteague

 

 

 

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Mark Broatch

 

 

Mark Broatch reads ‘Already’

 

Mark Broatch is a writer, reviewer and the author of four books.
He is a former deputy editor at the NZ Listener and is a fiction judge
for this year’s Ockham NZ Book Awards. His poetry has been published
in Landfall and the Poetry NZ Yearbook.

 

 

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Susanna Gendall

 

 

Susanna reads ‘Spring’

 

Susanna Gendall’s poetry and short fiction have appeared in JAAM, Takahē, Sport, Geometry, Landfall, Ambit and The Spinoff. Her debut collection, The Disinvent Movement, will be published next year (VUP).

 

 

Landfall page

 

 

 

Poetry Shelf connections: Murray Edmond’s ‘East Coast Waves’

 

East Coast Waves

 

Someone practicing a violin

who hasn’t practiced in a while,

a bike that has not been ridden

for a year or more

squeaks like that violin,

couples wonder who that person is

alongside whom they each walk,

facial muscles straining to relax

after 15 East Coast waves

performed rapid-fire,

at the dairy door

the lonesome existentialist

is writing words with water

on the concrete pavement stones,

while the pigeons in the phoenix palm

have eyes only for each other

 

Murray Edmond

 

 

Murray Edmond lives in Glen Eden, West Auckland. His latest book, Back Before You Know, includes two narrative poems, ‘The Ballad of Jonas Bones’ and ‘ The Fancier Pigeon’ (Compound Press, 2019).

Compound Press page

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Poetry Shelf connections: Mere Taito’s ‘Coloured’

 

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Mere Taito is a Rotuman Islander poet and flash fiction writer living in Hamilton with her partner Neil and nephew Lapuke. She is the author of the illustrated chapbook of poetry titled, The Light and Dark in Our Stuff.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Poetry Shelf connections: my phone a NZ bookshop project

 

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Before we moved into Level 4 lockdown, I decided I would phone a NZ bookshop each week and get them to recommend a book and I would pick one to get sent out to me.

I didn’t get very far as bookshops had to close! But the day before lockdown I phoned Time Out Bookstore in Mt Eden and spoke to Kiran Dass. I so appreciated Kiran talking when the shop was packed with people stocking up on books.

I have saved the parcel until today because I wanted to hear that my big children’s poetry anthology I have been working on is ok. And it is! So I am very happy. And now I have my treat!

The books seem entirely perfect to be reading now.

In the middle of night recently I heard Rebecca Priestly in conversation with Kim Hill on RNZ National about her new book, Fifteen Million Years in Antarctica (VUP), and it was breathtaking. It was a podcast of their session at the VERB Wellington Writer’s Festival.  I can’t wait to read this book. I can’t seem to find a link to the podcast – will add if I do!

Kiran recommended Olivia Laing’s The Lonely City (Allen & Unwin). Very excited about this book.

 

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Like many bookshops, Time Out will start doing online orders from next week when we move into Level 3.

This is a time to go gently on ourselves, for some it is a time to read, and for some it is not, and that is ok.

Some of us are in positions to support small businesses again, and I plan to resume my support of independent NZ bookshops.

Here is the latest advice from Time Out:

 

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Poetry Shelf connections: Tusiata Avia reads ‘Massacre’

 

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Tusiata Avia reads ‘Massacre’

The poem and audio appear in Best NZ Poems 2019.

 

 

Tusiata Avia is a poet, performer and writer. She has published three books of poetry, a chapbook, three children’s books and is included in over 100 anthologies, journals and online publications. Tusiata has held a number of writers’ residencies and awards, including the CNZ Fulbright Pacific Writer’s Fellowship at University of Hawai’i and the Janet Frame Literary Trust Award.  Known for her dynamic performance style, she wrote and then performed Wild Dogs Under My Skirt as a one-woman show (2002-2009). In 2016 it became a multi award-winning play for 6 women, directed by Anapela Polata’ivao. In January 2020 Wild Dogs Under My Skirt made its American debut, Off-Broadway.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Poetry Shelf connections: Bernadette Hall’s ‘the landscape of longing’

 

the landscape of longing

in memory of Gerry Melling, poet and architect 1947-2012

 

 

I shall explain herein the arrangement and symmetry

of private buildings from the position of the heavens in respect of the earth,

the inclination of the zodiac and from the sun’s course

 

just the cold left now like a smooth glove on the top of my hand

though the joint between my fingers is still warm

 

an object under the eye will appear very different  from the same object in an open space       

                                                      

think of the shell as part of the architectural setting, a shallow canopy

over the Madonna who, with her child, has been gathering raspberries

             

the injury which nature would effect is evaded by means of art

 

take, for example, the more tensile forms of tiny fish that dart,

a little more weighted with their body mass,

more straightforwardly down, slewing side to side like footballers

shaping new subtleties of line to distract the eye

 

it is the part of a skilful (wo)man  to consider the nature of the place, 

the purpose of the building and the beauty of it

                   

think of the falcon and the falconer,

of words in circular and ovoid shapes like the seventy-one

cervical vertebrae that held up the neck of the plesiosaur

think of Beethoven’s Quartet No. 15 in A minor

think of the Sky Box overlooking the West Bank in Wellington

think of Gerry and Geoff and Celeste and all the other beautiful people

 

 

Bernadette Hall

 

italicised text taken from the writings of the Roman architect, Vitruvius 80-15BC

 

 

Bernadette says:  Here is my lockdown poem. Some of the lines have been floating around for a while. I’ve long wanted to write something for Gerry. How good that this week Geoff Cochrane and Celeste should join him.  I’ve no idea who Celeste is. She appears in one of Geoff’s poems. She sounds beautiful. All I can say is, here’s to love and friendship, they are timeless. And thank you to all who are working to keep us all safe.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Poetry Shelf Connections: Harriet Allen celebrates The Night of All Souls by Philippa Swan

 

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The Night of All Souls by Philippa Swan,

 

Although April is rather a challenging month for its release, I’m very proud to be publishing this novel.

It is a Tardis of a book, for within its covers are various intriguing stories, a modern novella with an unusual love-hate triangle, a visit to the afterlife, biographical details of Edith Wharton, including the revelation of a secret love affair and indeed walk-on parts for Edith and a number of her circle, a tour through the gardens Edith wrote about and visited in Italy and created in America and France, plus snippets from Wharton’s own novels, poetry and memoir, and a whole lot more besides – all of which is integrated into a wonderfully upbeat and enthralling novel.

Philippa is indeed a literary Dr Who, taking us through time and space. We watch the young Edith in a rowing boat, waiting for a marriage proposal that never comes, we visit the Mount, the mansion she went on to build in Massachusetts, we drive with her, Henry James and a dashing rogue through the snowy countryside, we travel to modern-day Hyères in the south of France, and we are flies on the wall of a seedy hotel room in London.

When I used to picture Edith Wharton, I’d think of an amalgam of Gillian Anderson playing Lily Bart in the film of The House of Mirth, the wonderfully pompous characters that people Wharton’s novels and often deliver the acerbic and hilarious one-liners that would give Jane Austen a run for her money, and the photographs of Wharton that generally capture very grand settings and clothes but so often a rather wistful expression that has always made me wonder what the real woman was like. Thanks to The Night of All Souls, I now reckon I know her rather well. She’s come alive again in this novel and is someone I’m very reluctant to say goodbye to.

In fact, everyone who worked on this novel expressed reluctance at having to pass it on – we all wanted to stay in these multiple worlds, getting to know this fascinating woman. You can sample a chapter here

and look out for the Penguin Facebook page for Philippa’s launch speech and her daughter reading an extract.

You can access a copy through numerous online channels

 

Marsden Books in Karori was going to launch The Night of All Souls, so a big shout-out to them. As soon as bookshops open again, you can of course also purchase physical copies, and I urge you to do so as it is well worth making the acquaintance of Edith Wharton.

 

Harriet Allan, Fiction Publisher