Over
at Sphinx, the latest batch of pamphlet reviews is nearly complete.
However, the main page carries the news that these are the last.
Bearing in mind the important role that Sphinx has played in the rise
of poetry chapbooks over the past few years, this is sad news,
although it’s more than understandable. A quick summary of its
feats soon tells us just how much time and work it must have taken up
for Helena Nelson…
Sphinx
started life as a paper-based publication back in 2006, a magazine
dedicated to promoting poetry in pamphlet form. From 2010 onwards, it
was solely published on the internet. At the beginning, it followed a
typical route of one review per book. Nevertheless, its signature
format of three pieces per pamphlet was adopted after Issue 10. The
figures are huge: a total of 445 chapbooks have been dealt with via
864 reviews, most reviews getting 300-500 hits in the first couple of
weeks alone.
I’ve
been involved with the project on both sides on the fence. As a poet,
I was delighted to receive critical coverage for my books from three
different points of view, so Inventing
Truth was reviewed by
Richie McCaffery, Marcia Menter and Charlotte Gann.
As
a reviewer, I really enjoyed the experience of encountering verse
that I wouldn’t have read without Sphinx. There was a definite
frisson every time a batch of chapbooks arrived.
I
certainly learnt a lot: from the “Notes for reviewers” with its
list of review clichés to be avoided (e.g. …a new voice…shows
promise…deceptively simple…risk-taking…demotic…) to the
editing process of each review, where any syntactic messes or
semantic wobbles were sorted out. Moreover, the aim was always to
strike a positive note: Criticism should be constructive. Please make
it apparent this is a personal response, not Judgement Day.
One
of my tenets is that a poet should also feel at home in prose, and
doing reviews is a key part of that apprenticeship. In my own case, I
needed to shake off academic essay writing. Sphinx helped
tremendously!
There is at least still the solace that the
reviews from Sphinx will remain online as a snapshot of UK poetry
pamphlet publishing over the past eight years. What’s more, new
features and articles will be added in the future. Already, there are
historic interviews with Chris Hamilton-Emery (Salt), Num Stibbe
(Sylph Editions) and Leona Carpenter (Mulfran), not to mention Peter
Sansom on Twenty-Five
Years of the Poetry Business.
A new feature by Andrew Sclater on Stewed Rhubarb has also just been posted,
so it may be that the demise of the reviews will make time and space
for other kinds of writing.
For
the moment, why not have a look at the
archive? Be warned:
you might well find yourself purchasing more chapbooks as a result!
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