NZ Poetry Shelf 2015

NZ Poetry Shelf is a bit like a poetry piazza — a meeting point for news, views and readings that welcomes both critical debate and celebration. It is a place I have built to share my love of poetry with the help of others in various ways.

This year I aim to:

+    flag NZ poetry events, competitions, awards and news.
+    flag the release of new NZ poetry books via publishers’ press notes.
+    post interviews with New Zealand poets.
+    continue Poem Friday where I select and discuss a poem I have loved.
+    post book reviews. It is not possible for me to review ALL New Zealand poetry books but I
       want to review as many as time and interest allows.
+    host a series of mini poetry symposiums
+   Last year was such a busy year, I intend reviewing a number of 2014 poetry books that
      caught my eye from a stack of about 60.
+   I am willing to post guest features, musings, interviews and reviews. Please send brief
      proposal to email address below bearing in mind this blog runs on the currency of love.
+   I will  invite you to contribute to the annual list of favourite poetry books we have read in the
      past year.
Please send relevant material to be posted to paulajoygreen@gmail.com
(NOTE I cannot post PDFs)
Please send review copies to PO Box 95078, Swanson, Waitakere 0653

Ashleigh Young finds much to admire in the poetry of Tim Upperton and that admiration is infectious!

Ashleigh Young has posted an engaged reading (a not-review) of a poetry collection by Tim Upperton on her blog, eyelashroaming. It makes you want to go and buy the book, and read the book, if you haven’t already. It is a matter of semantics what you call it when you share your enthusiasms and entry points into poetry books. In my mind the best reviews do in fact ‘talk’ about the writing and the effects of the writing in a way that re-illuminates the content and its myriad possibilities. Bravo Ashleigh!

You can see Ashleigh’s full post here.

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‘Tim Upperton is the kind of poet who tends to have his poems shared without people asking his permission or paying him money. They’re the kind of poems that you want to share with another person immediately. So you do, which I can’t help but feel is a kind of stealing. I have done it often. I tell people they should buy the book, but how can you be sure they’ll follow through? When it comes to poetry, people don’t follow through. I need to repay my debt to Tim Upperton somehow, and rather than giving him money like a decent human being, I am going to write about his book The Night We Ate the Baby, like a writer. His book has been reviewed in only one place, briefly. Why hasn’t it been reviewed elsewhere? Probably because of shrinking arts review coverage on all fronts, or maybe because it was published by a small press, but a more interesting theory is: because it’s too good.

This isn’t a review. If it was, it would be effusive and dull. I actually just wanted to talk about the book. The first time I read these poems I thought of Larry David saying to Jeff Garlin that the Larry of Curb Your Enthusiasm is a fantasy – an embodiment of the things the real Larry would like to say. ‘I cannot tell you the pleasure, the pleasure that it gives me to have a moment of honesty in my life, albeit fictional. There is nothing that feels better to me!’ I’ve always thought there’s beauty in the way this honesty is delivered on the show, and watching it feels cathartic at the same time as it feels slightly unbearable. Because outside of that moment of honesty, ‘We’re full of shit all the time! It can’t be helped, you have to get along in this world, that’s the way to do it.’ In the end it’s always Larry against the world, holding his small triumphs close and being swallowed by a mob of Michael J. Fox fans. Anyway, my point is, it sometimes feels a bit like that in a Tim Upperton poem, especially when he’s not going easy..

Dazzling new poetry collection from David Eggleton

The Conch Trumpet-Eggleton

Press release from Otago University Press:

Dazzling new poetry collection from David Eggleton

The Conch Trumpet calls to the scattered tribes of contemporary New Zealand. It sounds the signal to listen close, critically and ‘in alert reverie’. David Eggleton’s reach of references, the marriage of high and low, the grasp of popular and classical allusion, his eye both for cultural trash and epiphanic beauty, make it seem as if here Shakespeare shakes down in the Pacific.

There are dazzling compressions of history; astonishing paens to harbours, mountains, lakes and rivers; wrenchingly dark, satirical critiques of contemporary politics, of solipsism, narcissism, the apolitical, the corporate, with a teeming vocabulary to match. And often too a sense of the imperative, grounding reality of the phenomenal world – the thisness of things:

Cloud whispers brush daylight’s ear;

fern question-marks form a bush encore;

forlorn heat swings cobbed in webs.

– from ‘Nor-wester Flying’

In this latest collection David Eggleton is court jester/philosopher/lyricist, and a kind of male Cassandra, roving warningly from primeval swampland to gritty cityscape to the information and disinformation cybercloud.

David Eggleton lives in Dunedin. He has previously had published six books of poems

and a book of short fiction, as well as a number of works of non-fiction. Well known as a

performance poet, he’s also released several poetry recordings featuring his collaborations

with musicians, and been involved in poetry text collaborations with practitioners of a variety

of other art forms, from sculpture to fashion design. His poetry and short stories appear in a

wide range of recent anthologies.

‘David Eggleton’s word-blasts feel like they come from further left-of-centre than anything else written in New Zealand … It is endlessly imaginative, it’s funny – plus intellectually rewarding.’

Nick Ascroft, Landfall, 2002

‘His poetry is vital and contemporary, steeped in popular and postmodern culture. It offers a vision of New Zealand which is at once resolutely local and yet not quite recognisable or predictable – offers a vision of ourselves which defies expectation to surprise and charm.’ – Louise O’ Brien, Dominion Post, 2001.

Release Date: February 2015

ISBN 978-1-877578-93-9, $25

www.otago.ac.nz/press

http://www.facebook.com/OtagoUniversityPress

The judges for the 2015 Sarah Broom Poetry Prize

The judges for the 2015 Sarah Broom Poetry Prize are:

2015 GUEST JUDGE

2015 JUDGES

S HuntVona Groarke
Vona is an Irish poet. She has published six collections with Gallery Press, the latest being X, (2014), a Poetry Book Society Recommendation. Others include Spindrift (2010), Flight (2002) – which won the Michael Hartnett Award, and her translation from Eibhlín Dubh Ní Chonaill’s eighteenth-century Irish, Lament for Art O’Leary (2008), which is currently being adapted as an opera by Irish composer, Irene Buckley. In the U.S., she publishes with Wake Forest University Press. Her poems have recently appeared in Yale Review, The New Yorker, Kenyon Review, Boston Review, The Guardian, The Times and Poetry Review. She teaches poetry in the Centre for New Writing at the University of Manchester in the UK and is the editor of Poetry Ireland Review.
S RossSarah Ross, BA (Hons) Canterbury, MSt (Distinction) Oxford, DPhil Oxford
Sarah is a Senior Lecturer in English at Victoria University of Wellington. She specialises in early modern literature, poetry, and women’s writing, and she is the editor of Katherine Austen’s Book M (ACMRS, 2011) and the author of numerous articles on early modern women’s writing, poetry, and manuscript culture.

M GleissnerMichael Gleissner, LLB (Hons), MBA, CPA
Michael met Sarah in 1990 and they married in 1999 before moving to New Zealand. Michael is General Manager Corporate Strategy at the New Zealand Superannuation Fund. Previously he held Chief Financial Officer roles at Pacific Fibre and Sealord Group and various roles at Fonterra. Michael has also worked as a lawyer in London and Auckland. He is an avid supporter of the Arts, and shared a particular strong interest in poetry with Sarah. Michael lives in Auckland with his and Sarah’s three young children.

Nominate your Great Kiwi Classic — Could be poetry! Hmmm

The hunt for the Great Kiwi Classic returns in 2015 and New Zealand readers nationwide are invited to join our celebration of iconic Kiwi books by nominating their favourites.

Launched in 2014 by the New Zealand Book Council and Auckland Writers Festival, the Great Kiwi Classic initiative is an annual opportunity for readers of all ages and interests to celebrate our most treasured books and writers.

Last year Keri Hulme’s Booker Prize-winning novel The Bone People was selected as the inaugural Great Kiwi Classic after a wealth of public nominations. One year on, we are once again asking enthusiastic readers to help decide which book deserves to be crowned this year’s supreme title.

We want to hear what your most loved classic is and why. Your choice might be decades old or hot off the press, celebrated or obscure, a charming romantic romp or a piece of social commentary so searing it has ended friendships. Any book written by a Kiwi writer is in the running.
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To nominate your Great Kiwi Classic and tell us why it’s the one, visit the Great Kiwi Classic Facebook page: http://www.facebook.com/GreatKiwiClassic, or email your suggestions to greatkiwiclassic@bookcouncil.org.nz.

Nominations open Thursday 15 January and close 5pm Friday 13 February.

Throughout the campaign join us on Facebook for fresh debate, book giveaways, competitions and more. Nominate the same book you put forward last year, update your choice or join in the discussion. Follow the vote and read expert literary opinions on the New Zealand Book Council’s online magazine Booknotes Unbound (http://booknotes-unbound.org.nz/).

After nominations close our panel will convene to consider nominations, with the big reveal of this year’s classic announced at the launch of the Auckland Writers Festival programme on Tuesday 17 March.

The Great Kiwi Classic 2015 will then be the subject of a lively event at the Festival in May, featuring top writers and experts in a book club style discussion where all views on the book and its claim to classic status will be entertained.

Spread the word and make your vote count in 2015. The hunt for the next Great Kiwi Classic is on!

Call for Entries to the Kathleen Grattan Award 2015 – Emma Neale to judge

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Call for Entries to the Kathleen Grattan Award 2015

Otago University Press has great pleasure in putting a call out for entries in to the Kathleen Grattan Award 2015 – it’s time to get those manuscripts into shape! Emma Neale – celebrated poet, novelist and prose writer – is this year’s award judge. The closing date for entries is 31 July.

The Kathleen Grattan Award is one of New Zealand’s most substantial awards for poetry: the winner receives $10,000 and Otago University Press considers the winning manuscript for publication. The winner also receives a year’s subscription to Landfall.

See the award web page for details of how to enter.

http://www.otago.ac.nz/press/landfall/grattanaward.html

About the Kathleen Grattan Award

Auckland poet Kathleen Grattan, a journalist and former editor of the New Zealand Woman’s Weekly, died in 1990. A member of the Titirangi Poets, her work was published in Landfall and other volumes including Premier Poets, a collection from the World Poetry Society. Her daughter Jocelyn Grattan, who also worked for the New Zealand Woman’s Weekly, shared her mother’s love of literature. She has generously left Landfall a bequest with which to establish an award in memory of Kathleen Grattan.

The Kathleen Grattan Award, initially established as a yearly award, is now awarded biannually.

Previous Award Winners

2013 Siobhan Harvey (Cloudboy)

2011 Emma Neale (The Truth Garden)

2010 Jennifer Compton (This City)

2009 Leigh Davis (Repairing of a Life)

2008 Joanna Preston (The Summer King)

 

Celebrating a year on Poetry Shelf: Four short poems by Bill Manhire

 

 

Top Dance Moves

You stand around not knowing what to do.

Then music comes and puts

its foot inside your shoe.

 

 

The E-mail Lover

Such clumsy roads keep us apart!

If I could find

the old, hand-written heart.

 

 

Beyond the screen but not completely out of reach

I can just make out the blackboard

where the first of my teachers first wrote speech.

 

 

My World War I Poem

Inside each trench, the sound of prayer.

Inside each prayer, the sound of digging.

 

© Bill Manhire 2014

 

 

These couplets are from Top Dance Moves & other poems, a slim chapbook published by Marinera Press, Wellington 2014. Some you may recognise as Bill tweeted a few of the short poems in the book from @pacificraft. This glorious wee collection filled me with the joy of poetry — the way slender lines send tendrils into a past that jumpstarts, or a heart that pulls, or a melody that swings, or a present that makes believe. One of my favourite reads of the year.

Thanks to everyone who read, shared or contributed to my posts in 2014.

Warm regards for the summer break,

Paula Green