Mat Riches' poetry blog, Wear The Fox Hat, is a relative newcomer to the scene but is already one of my favourites.
His professional background in television marketing and advertising provides us with an excellent and timely reminder of how work can illuminate poetry, as in his excellent recent feature on the subject (see here), while his honesty and self-deprecating humour also lend a journal-like quality to his weekly posts. He generously shares his journey through attempts, successes and failures in writing and publishing poems, reminding and reassuring other poets that they're not alone.
Wear The Fox Hat is an excellent addition to the world of poetry blogging, and I've added it to the blog roll that runs down the right-hand side of this page.
Thursday, 21 February 2019
Monday, 18 February 2019
Writing simply
Helena Nelson's blog posts after her reading windows are always fascinating, and the latest one is no exception (see here). Of particular interest is her remark that she wrote the following on many poems this time: ’Writing simply is the hardest thing.’
I'm personally drawn to this statement, as it very much mirrors my own poetic approach and method. Helena Nelson suggests that one reason why poets are afraid to write plainly is because they're worried the result wouldn't be a poem at all. I'd agree with her, but argue that writing simply also carries huge risks. There are no accoutrements, no verbal fireworks, no make-up to hide any flaws, and the consequence is that any mistakes become glaring.
Countless poets, editors and critics appear to equate ’simple’ with ’easy’ or ’facile’. However, the reverse is true, as many readers recognise. This last point seems to me a good thing. We all want readers, don't we...?
Countless poets, editors and critics appear to equate ’simple’ with ’easy’ or ’facile’. However, the reverse is true, as many readers recognise. This last point seems to me a good thing. We all want readers, don't we...?
Wednesday, 6 February 2019
Subverted pronouns, Oliver Comins' Oak Fish Island
It’s relatively easy to identify
certain very English qualities in Oliver Comins’ first full collection, Oak Fish Island (Templar Poetry, 2018),
but there’s also a slippery something that makes his poetry stand out
from the crowd and resist any attempts to pigeonhole him.
Twenty-five years in the writing, Oak Fish Island features restrained
lyricism, quiet observation and subtle layering of detail, yet a list of these
characteristics undoubtedly sells Comins’ work short. Here are snippets from
four poems, all of which hint at the poet’s idiosyncratic traits:
…My heart – or was it yours? –
flying solo on the Jubilee line,
already gone for what was
beginning to seem like forever.
(from ’Day
Trip to Brighton’)
It wasn’t me, as such, kissing the
organist
when you slipped through the church
looking for your poem…
(from ’All
Saints’)
…Someone is walking down a street
past this row of terraced cottages,
their gardens silent and still…
(from ’Old
Cold’)
When I send this to you
it is a boy writing to a girl
and I am sorry it has to be
like that – knowing the tide
of your want can change…
(from ’What
Sort of a Man am I?’)
These seemingly disparate poems are
united by the doubt they cast on the reader’s assumptions, by the way roles are
undermined, by the way pronouns stand on shaky ground.
One of Comins’ main achievements in
Oak Fish Farm is the subversion of the English lyric tradition. At first sight,
he seem to fit snugly into its check list, as mentioned at the beginning of
this review, but that’s only until those pronouns start to unsettle us, bit by
bit. We begin to wonder about the particulars of the poet’s or the speaker’s
relationships, and our frustration grows as we find them difficult to discern,
as if Comins were holding back on us, afraid to show his life or flesh out
narratives and contexts.
Of course, as the collection
progresses, it becomes clear that the exact opposite is true. Comins’ technique
plays with our aesthetic and thematic expectations, enabling us to cast off
facile suppositions. This approach is not an affectation, nor is it a mere
device. Instead, it’s a poetic method.
Moreover, one potential problem with
the reading of Oliver Comin’s work is that an individual poem, taken out of
context, might appear unsatisfactory. Only in the context of his full collection
can the magnitude and coherence of his vision be recognised and understood.
Oak
Fish Island is not only a tremendously enjoyable
book but also a terrific achievement. It reaches out beyond the specific to the
universal, homing in on the key issues of life and poetry. As such, it’s one of
the most significant collections I’ve encountered in recent years. I’ll be
savouring Oliver Comins’ poems for a long time to come.