Tag Archives: Anne Kenndy

Poetry Shelf weekend reading and an invitation

in the seam of a dream I find myself
in the dream of a seam I write
spilling onto the roads of imagined cities

I don’t know about you but poetry in Aotearoa in 2026 is a sizzling simmering dazzling arrival of new books. I keep picking a book from the review stack and find myself electrified nourished challenged utterly in awe with what words can do within and beyond the form and possibilities of a poem.

Thank you for your continued support as readers and writers, and for sharing the POETRY LOVE.

five readings

Poetry Shelf Monday Poem: Myths of the Freedom Campers by David Eggleton

Poetry Shelf Playing Favourites: Anne Kennedy picks Bill Manhire

Poetry Shelf review: Before the Winter Ends by Khadro Mohamed

Poetry Shelf Breathing Room: Puanga by Airini Beautrais

Poetry Shelf celebrates Ariana Tikao’s Pepeha Portal – a review and a reading

an invitation

Poetry Shelf Off the Shelf: I want to start a new series on Poetry Shelf where we pick a beloved New Zealand poetry book from at least a couple of years ago, maybe twenty, maybe fifty, maybe a hundred. A poetry blast from the past. Choose the book. Write one or two paragraphs on why the book has stuck to you. With permission we could even include a poem from it. I will post on the blog.

Please note our Swanson Post Box lobby is closing in the next few days so will advise you soon of our new post box.

Poetry Shelf Playing Favourites: Anne Kennedy picks Bill Manhire

An Inspector Calls

We tiptoed into the house.
The neighbourhood was quiet as a mouse.

I felt very on edge. The money
Was in the oven, not the fridge.

*

I glanced at the note on the piano.
Uh oh, uh oh, uh oh.

*

There’s always a point at which a routine enquiry
turns into something else entirely.

I had to shoulder my way in.
The bathtub was simply full of the victim.

Bill Manhire
from Lifted, VUP, 2005

I love it when a poem is readable and seems easy to follow like a catchy song, and yet its surprises and depths never end, and I want to read it again and again. ‘An Inspector Calls’, by Bill Manhire, is such a poem.

Over the years, I’ve convened quite a lot of workshops on the topic of narrative poetry. I make a course reader from a bunch of poems which change over time, but this poem always seems to be in my reader. As I’m writing this, I realise I’ve never once asked Bill Manhire if he minds me rolling out his brilliant poem to a class. Sorry, Bill! Do you mind?

Anyway, I usually rabbit on a bit at the beginning about something must happen and near and far (looking up close, narrative arc) and who’s looking at what and keep with the sound. I know already, because I’ve read it hundreds of times, that ‘An Inspector Calls’ does all these things to perfection, but that it also has that extra thing you can never quite explain. It’s original. This poem always engenders a lot of discussion. People are amazed that it can be so short and yet cover so much territory. They love the jazzy sound of it, the funny rhyme at the beginning, the noir feel, the angular look. After a while, they notice that ‘I’ is three different points-of-view, and they love that surprise. After a while longer, they talk about the way all the ingredients work together in a way that seems effortless yet asks us to – well, all sorts of things. And I totally agree.

‘An Inspector Calls’ is a poem that has been with me for a long time.

Years late: Thank you, Bill.

Anne Kennedy, May 2026 

 

Bill Manhire’s latest poetry collection is Lyrical Ballads, THWUP, 2026. He has won the New Zealand Book Award for Poetry five times, and was New Zealand’s inaugural poet laureate. He founded and directed the International Institute of Modern Letters at Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of Wellington. He has edited major anthologies of New Zealand literature, including, with Marion McLeod, the now classic Some Other Country: New Zealand’s Best Short Stories (1984). In 2018 Bill was awarded an Icon Award Whakamana Hiranga from the Arts Foundation.

Anne Kennedy’s most recent books are The Sea Walks into a WallThe Ice Shelf and, as editor, Remember Me: Poems to Learn by Heart from Aotearoa New Zealand. She is the current editor of AUP’s New Poets series. Awards include the Prime Minister’s Award for Poetry, the NZ Post Book Award for Poetry and the Montana Book Award for Poetry. Anne lives in Tāmaki Makaurau. 

Anne Kennedy and Iain Sharp in conversation

      kennedy_180 sharp_180  
Anne Kennedy has had success in every genre she tackles – fiction, poetry and film.  Her latest volume of poetry won its category in the 2013 NZ Post Book Awards. Her latest novel The Last Days of the National Costume is a finalist in the fiction category of this year’s awards. She holds The University of Auckland Residency at the Michael King Writers’ Centre, working on her next novel.
In his day job Iain Sharp is a manuscripts librarian in the Sir George Grey Special Collections at Auckland Library. He is well known as a reviewer and writer, as a poet and he has authored two books. 

 
Join them in a conversation about the world of writing over a glass of wine.

Sunday 24 August 2014, 4 pm
Michael King Writers’ Centre, Summit Road
Takarunga Mt Victoria, Devonport (off Kerr St)

Entry by koha ($5)
Bookings recommended (by August 22)

Ph: 09 445 8451
E: assistant@writerscentre.org.nz