I have a poem, titled La Vendimia, in the new pamphlet/mini anthology from Candlestick Press, Ten Poems about Wine.
I'm grateful to the editor, Jonathan Davidson, for having selected my work, and it's especially pleasing to appear alongside such a star-studded cast. You can get hold of your copy via this link, while here's a photo of the pamphlet in all its glory...
Wednesday, 19 April 2023
Ten Poems about Wine from Candlestick Press
Monday, 17 April 2023
A celebration of Sphinx Reviews (2006-2023)
Sphinx Reviews is a project that has run alongside HappenStance Press since 2006 (see its website here). Founded by Helena Nelson and co-edited for the last six years by Charlotte Gann, it specialises in reviews of poetry pamphlets, a
format that has long struggled to receive critical attention, and provides an
incredible service to poets, publishers and, of course, readers.
By my tedious manual count, a total of
1461 books have been reviewed on Sphinx, many of them by more than person, the equivalent of over 2,000 pamphlets that were received by Helena
Nelson, repackaged and sent back out to her loyal band of reviewers. 2,000
batches of stamps to be paid for. Umpteen treks to the post office. 2,000
reviews that were edited by her (to the huge benefit of the reviewers
themselves, whose prose style and critical approach to poetry were often
transformed via this process). 2,000 posts that were formatted, uploaded and
optimised for search engines.
What’s more, for many poets, the
review of their pamphlet on Sphinx was the only critical response they’d
ever receive. That’s a hugely generous gift in anyone’s language. Looking back
at the archive, there are a fair few poets who have sadly died in the
intervening years, though their reviews on Sphinx remain. As a record of
pamphlet poetry in the U.K., it’s irreplaceable.
And now, of course, Sphinx is coming
to an end. Helena Nelson has given so much to poets over the years via HappenStance
Press itself and via Sphinx Reviews, in both cases to the detriment of her own writing,
but even this labour of love must inevitably be finite.
Like so many positive presences in our
lives, Sphinx has probably come to be taken for granted, as if it were destined
to accompany pamphlet publishing forever. It will be sorely missed once poets
and publishers bemoan the absence of alternatives. However, its online archive is to
be cherished and celebrated. Here’s hoping that in the aftermath of this
closure, we at least start to see more of Helena Nelson’s exceptional
poetry…!
Monday, 10 April 2023
Understated but resonant, John Lynch's These Days
From the title of the book itself to
the titles of the individual poems, from the tones and colours of the cover to
the absence of blurbs, from the syntax to the semantics employed in the poems,
pretty much everything about John Lynch’s first full collection, These Days
(Garlic Press, 2022) feels understated.
As a consequence, especially bearing
in mind that current trends in the poetry scene seem to be heading in an
opposite direction, it might not come as any surprise that These Days
seems to have flown under the radar. In fact, there don’t seem to be any other
reviews available online at the moment. However, a closer look demonstrates
that Lynch’s poems are very much worthy of recognition.
The poems in this collection work in
tandem and build their effects when read together, their emotional impact gradually
accumulating, page after page. Any quote from them inevitably fails to do them
full justice, but the last two stanzas of ‘Vent’
give an indication of their latent power...
…One evening, in the kitchen
I found her scraping what he’d said
wasn’t cooked into the bin,
then she opened the window wider
to let out all the steam.
A tub of Peter’s vanilla ice-cream
amongst the cutlery and saucepans
on the draining board,
she stood staring out,
scooping up mouthfuls with a
tablespoon.
Of course, on first reading, this feels
like a quintessential kitchen-sink drama! However, there’s a complexity to
these lines via the details that are layered to make the scene come alive,
while a subtle music also gathers force, especially in the final stanza, in
which the final two lines are of particular interest.
From the penultimate line onwards,
Lynch’s cadences step up a gear, the soft consonants interspersed with
explosions, the aural patterning of the vowels in ascendance. And then the
pent-up emotion comes to a climax in the shortened penultimate line before its
release in the longer
final line, a metaphorical ‘vent’ with an implicit reference to the poem’s title, thus complementing and contrasting with the more obvious physical ‘vent’ of the previous stanza. In this context, deft juxtaposition extends the poem's reach.
As is made clear by the above extract,
Lynch’s unassuming approach is actually underpinned not only by a deep
understanding of the ties between meaning and language, but also demonstrates an
unexpected capacity for deploying sophisticated technique when required to make
a poem lift off. These Days is a collection with emotional depth that’s
capable of generating its own poetic worlds. Prejudices and fashions might put
many readers off, but John Lynch is a skilled poet whose work resonates. Thoroughly
recommended!