If social and traditional media promise to bombard and eventually dull your senses over the next few tumultuous weeks, Rogue Strands can offer perfect antidotes. During the first half of November, I'll be posting a top-notch, forget-all-the-crap-and-immerse-yourself, original poem by each and every featured poet (except myself!) from our forthcoming Rogue Strands reading in London on 28th November (see the event details on its Facebook page here). Of course, these tasters will also inevitably entice you to come along to what is destined to be a terrific evening of poetry, even if I say so myself...
Wednesday, 30 October 2019
Saturday, 19 October 2019
Audiences at poetry readings
At one
of my recent readings in the U.K., a Spanish woman approached me at the
interval to say hello. She explained that she’d seen my event advertised
in the local paper and had come along, just as she might attend a concert,
exhibition or lecture. She was amazed to find that she was the only non-poet in
the building apart from the barman and two long-suffering spouses.
This is
because in Spain (in my own personal experience) on average maybe only two or three people at
any given poetry reading are poets. The rest have an interest in the arts. They’re
often teachers, academics, visual artists, etc, who enjoy poetry just as they
enjoy other genres. This cross-fertilisation means that poetry reaches far more
readers than in the U.K., while also overcoming the simple fact that a large
chunk of people at most poetry event in the U.K. would actually love to be
giving the reading themselves.
So,
having identified a problem and an uncomfortable comparison, I’m pondering the
causes and potential solutions. Firstly, I’d argue that we could all do more to
reach out to the millions who think poetry’s not for them except when attending
weddings or funerals. Secondly, I do feel a concerted, coordinated, long-term
effort is required to ensure that poetry acquires new readers who don’t
necessarily aspire to being poets themselves.
Here’s
one example of how things are done in parts of Spain: instead of getting a poet
into a specific school to do a workshop, certain councils bring in a poet every
month of the academic year to give a reading in the morning at the main theatre
in the city for kids from all the schools (the poet’s work is previously read
in class, of course), followed by a reading at the same venue in the evening
for the general public. Everyone who attends either event is given a tiny
booklet of the poet’s work for free to take home with them. Hundreds of people
progressively learn how to listen to and read poetry without seeing it as
something that’s written by poets for other poets.
Would this work in the U.K.?
Sunday, 13 October 2019
A clarity of vision, M.R. Peacocke's Honeycomb
Back in
January, when M.R. Peacocke generously granted me permission to post one of my
favourite poems (see here) from Honeycomb, her recent HappenStance pamphlet,
I promised a review of the chapbook in question, and here it is.
Honeycomb is an unusual pamphlet in many
ways, not least because it represents something of a New & Very, Very
Selected Poems, combining more recent uncollected pieces with complementary
poems from M.R. Peacocke’s previously published full collections. As such, it
represents an ideal introduction to her work.
Moving
on to this collection itself, if I had to choose one single term to encapsulate
M.R. Peacocke’s poetry it would be “clear-eyed”. There’s a clarity of vision to
her poems that stretches from the construction of her sentences and the
cadences of her lines to the layering of her narratives and the thrust of her
thematic core.
This
afore-mentioned thematic core pivots on a teasing-out of the tension between
life and death, youth and ageing, nature and humanity, all illustrated by minor
details that take on huge magnitude when brought together as one. An excellent
example can be found in the final stanza of ’Taking Leave’:
…And
it’s like that, people leave,
sooner
than they thought,
sooner
than they knew, and things
don’t
wait, and a lifetime
isn’t
enough to recover the words,
uncover,
discover the words.
A lesser
poet would have thought a stronger effect could be gained in the closing lines
by bunching the three …cover verbs together artificially one after another. Instead,
Peacocke repeats ’the words’ at the end of both the last two lines, splitting
up the verbs in such a natural way that these lines manage to take the reader
aback, cast fresh meaning on existing language but also seem inevitable, all at
the same time. She suddenly reminds us of the subtle differences in meaning
between recover, uncover and discover, juxtaposing the urgency of the search
for meaning with the impossibility of achieving such a feat.
Quiet
voices tend to be lost amid our contemporary tumult, and M.R. Peacocke’s runs
just such a risk. However, as remarked earlier, her clarity of vision is
crucial to her poetry’s longevity. It provides her work with a edge that can
cut through digital cocoons and remind us how to feel. As a consequence, I
strongly recommend you get hold of Honeycomb, but with one warning from
my own experience: you could then be tempted into acquiring the rest of M.R.
Peacocke’s excellent books as well.
Wednesday, 9 October 2019
Poetry Bites in Birmingham
Prior to the Rogue Strands event in London on 28th November and Poetry at Pembroke in Oxford on 27th November, I'm really looking forward to appearing as the guest poet at Poetry Bites in Birmingham on 26th November. That's three reading on consecutive days, so I'll have to get in training!
On this occasion, the details are as follows: Poetry Bites will take place at the Kitchen Garden Café, 17 York Road, Kings Heath, Birmingham, B14 7SA. Entry is five pounds, while food will be available from 6.30 p.m. onwards and the event itself will begin at 7.30 p.m..
On this occasion, the details are as follows: Poetry Bites will take place at the Kitchen Garden Café, 17 York Road, Kings Heath, Birmingham, B14 7SA. Entry is five pounds, while food will be available from 6.30 p.m. onwards and the event itself will begin at 7.30 p.m..
Saturday, 5 October 2019
Poetry at Pembroke
The last week in November promises to be a busy time for me. Not only will I be reading at our second Rogue Strands event in London on 28th November, but I also have two additional readings in other cities on the 27th and the 26th!
Here are the details for Oxford, where I'm delighted to report that I'll be the guest poet for Poetry at Pembroke. The event will take place in the Mary Hyde Eccles Room at Pembroke College, Univeristy of Oxford, at 6 p.m. on 27th November, with free entry and an open mic (see link here). It would be lovely to see any of you who might be in the vicinity...
Here are the details for Oxford, where I'm delighted to report that I'll be the guest poet for Poetry at Pembroke. The event will take place in the Mary Hyde Eccles Room at Pembroke College, Univeristy of Oxford, at 6 p.m. on 27th November, with free entry and an open mic (see link here). It would be lovely to see any of you who might be in the vicinity...
Wednesday, 2 October 2019
Oliver Comins' poems at Wild Court
Understated yet packing a subtle punch, Oliver Comins' work always lingers long in the memory, and his three new poems up at Wild Court today are no exception. You can read them here, along with a treasure trove of the best in contemporary poetry.
Tuesday, 1 October 2019
Verbs, verbs, verbs, Declan Ryan's Fighters, Losers
At first
sight, Declan Ryan’s second pamphlet, Fighters, Losers (New Walk
Editions, 2019) displays many of the technical qualities that made his first
Faber New Poets chapbook stand out. Both collections share the capacity for
serving up delicately structured narratives, keen humanity and linguistic
playfulness. However, Fighters, Losers brings a stronger sense of
confidence in his poetic effects to the table, and thus a lighter touch.
In these
nine poems about boxing, Ryan employs reportage, avoiding subjective adjectives
and implicit judgement, as in the following extract from the pamphlet’s opening
poem, The Resurrection of Diego ’Chico’ Corrales:
…He’s
just been knocked down for a second time,
in this
tenth round, by José Luis Castillo,
but now
he’s standing up, and the fight resuming.
He’s
starting to open up
and land
heavy shots: a right cross moves Castillo,
who
smiles, which means he’s hurt…
Accumulated
observation here is mainly achieved through the use of verbs, as in the non-defining
relative clause (’who smiles’), while the narrative is driven
forward via a shift from the present perfect to the present continuous tense,
which also lends additional immediacy.
As the
poem moves on, it also displays certain other deft features that are common to
several pieces in the collection, as in the opening lines to the fourth stanza:
…Two
years from tonight, Corrales will lie dead
on the
Fort Apache Road in Las Vegas,
his
Suzuki motorcycle in component parts,
his
license expired, his blood three times the legal limit…
Not only
do these lines crank up their subtle power through the layering of reported
details alongside those afore-mentioned supercharged verbs, but this stanza
immediately announces a change in narrative gear in its first line via the
sudden use of the future tense.
Ryan
employs this technique of shifting from the present to the future tense to
excellent effect throughout his pamphlet, using it as an axis within the poem,
a pivotal point at which everything changes. The previous lines are immediately
thrown into startling, fresh relief, while the following lines are projected
forward.
Fighters,
Losers demonstrates
that Declan Ryan has learned to trust his readers and his own skill in
generating huge empathy via restraint, juxtaposition of details and a
masterclass in the manipulation of verbs, verbs, verbs. His writing in these
poems therefore becomes emotionally resonant far beyond any mere portrayal of
individual boxers or specific moments in sport. I very much recommend this
chapbook to all readers, especially to those who might think a bunch of poems
about boxing cannot move them.