Sunday, 26 September 2010

Bloodaxe anthology of black and asian poets

In a recent survey it was found that less than 1% of all poets published by poetry publishers in the UK were black or asian; this is a shocking statistic- Bloodaxe have brought out a new anthology of black and asian poets called "Ten" and hopefully this will begin to redress this totally unfair and unjust statistic/situation. Here is an interesting link to the making of "Ten":

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Eo8LIFXqJZ4

Friday, 24 September 2010

Penelope Shuttle's new collection of poems

Penelope Shuttle was once described as "The Queen of Poetry" in a comment I read somewhere on facebook. I think this is an apt description of her and her work- with a royal grace she entertains us with great verse and at the same time her experiences of poetry and the poetry world allows her such a regal title. Her new collection from Bloodaxe is out very soon and well worth checking out, (I really enjoyed her last collection "Redgrove's Wife"). Follow this link to find out more:

http://www.bloodaxebooks.com/titlepage.asp?isbn=1852248823

Wednesday, 22 September 2010

Poet Profile: Robert Marsland


There is a plethora of poets out there that nobody gets to here about, but who are just as talented as those poets who for some reason receive all the attention. One of them is the Scottish poet Robert Marsland. He is the editor of the Glasgow based poetry magazine "Essence" and has had his work published in magazines like Cake, The New Writer and Gutter. Here are some of his poems:







Avalanche

The blossom and bud of the trees,
The greenness, the greenness, a flash of colour
The sweet scents and herbal flavours,
The waterfall sonorousnesses of flora and fauna, -
The chirrup and tweet and twinkle of a million birds,
The scuttling and scurrying of cities, colonies of ants,
The play of rabbits and other beasts in their mating,
The feeling and warmth of brilliant sunshine,
The rain a light showering upon this fecund and material earth.
The avalanche of spring, ebullient life’s blood
Comes rushing after winter’s dark decay






Modigliani

Those nudes, those stretched and oh-so elegant
Parisian femmes
That Modigliani suffused with the pallidness
And blank ease of the dead
The cool and taut frigid gaze of modernism
The eyes empty shallow grey lakes staring nowhere,
No place, no time
A kind of alien beauty
The supine flesh a contemplation
It all ended in the neckline that
place where jewels sit and kisses
land from a lover




Lie with angels

 summer fruit
 my dreadful loins
 have sprung anew
 and set the stars
 dripping with thorns
 pleasure is not a principle
 nor vice a cause
 so bleed gently into the
 rivers of this earth
 and cause a new corruption




Eagle

Bright wings on which the eagle’s dawn is made
To fly those super-currents, to feel the buoyant air
To have a thousand harvests below you
To feel the succulence of heaven,
To make the sky light and bring majesty
To this earth





River of birth

Hurtling through the void
I reach my increase and my speed
I am a Salmon

Pascale Petit

Pascale Petit in my opinion is a poet you can relate to and enjoy-her work makes sense and resonates with our humanity and she is a far better poet than some of her contemporaries. Here she is reading from her latest collection which I would recommend:

http://www.youtube.com/user/serenbooks

Do posh birds make good poets?

The poetry scene in the UK is littered with "posh birds" old and young, with Phd's from cambridge and accents to die for. But do they make good poets or perhaps they fit the profile of what a female poet should be as espoused and manufactured by the editors of the leading poetry publishers like Carcanet, Bloodaxe, Seren, Faber and Faber etc- let's have some female poets with real life experience and who are a bit rough around the edges and less of your garden party types please!

I'm thinking Tracy Emin, meets Lindsay Lohan with a bit of Courtney Love

Here is an example of what I mean

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2WsD2odziKE  (I love the way she says "smack")

Emma Jones



Emma Jones, an Australian, is currently poet-in-residence at the Wordsworth Trust
in Grasmere, Cumbria, England, and is author of one volume of verse, The Striped
World (Faber & Faber, 2009), which won both Australia’s Queensland Premier’s
Literary Award, as well as the Forward Poetry Prize for first book, the UK's most
prestigious award for a first book of poems.


Discoverd Emma Jones on the net tonight and might buy her first collection and see
what all the fuss was about:

Here she is reading her poetry (which I did enjoy) and being loved up
by the critics on Newsnight Review:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/newsnight/review/7771077.stm

Woodward on Roddy Lumsden

Roddy Lumsden is Trapped by Time and Space


 

Roddy Lumsden made a big entrance onto the British poetry scene when he won
The Eric Gregory Award in 1991 at the age of twenty five, since then Lumsden has
never succeeded in replicating the major success he once had in prize terms.
While his general success as a poet is incontestable, to look at Lumsden’s career
by the measure of literature awards is to see him running a very strange race
through time - backwards from his peak of success to obscurity. Lumsden is indeed
in an unusual position; while he has been running backwards his fellow Scottish
contemporaries have outstripped him over and over again, most notably Don Paterson,
Robin Robertson and Sean O Brien, the headliners of the last powerful generation
of poets all of whom were writing and winning big prizes in the 90s and all of whom
continue to do so, unlike Lumsden, for whom the natural progression of time seems
to have been all wrong.

So far Roddy Lumsden has had a prolific and highly active career, between his
Eric Gregory award and the publication of his first collection Yeah Yeah Yeah he
worked as a quizmaster writing two three-hour quizzes each week and brought
out two chap books Elsewhere Perhaps Later and new poets series 1, the latter
shared with Kate Lowenstein. He has had numerous residencies including one with
the City of Aberdeen and most interestingly one to the St Andrews Bay Hotel,
a hotel golf resort and as ‘writer in residence’ to the music industry from which came
The Message, a book on poetry and pop music. Since then we’ve seen one collection
after another The Book of Love, Roddy Lumsden is Dead, an exploration of persona
as inspired by Lumsden’s problems with DPD (depersonalisation disorder) The
Bubble bride, Mischief Nights: New and Selected Poems, the pocket book Super
Try Again and Third Wish Wasted (poems from which were awarded the Bess
Hoskin Prize by the Poetry Foundation) with his eighth poetry collection Terrific
Melancholy due out in 2011. Besides this he has held many high profile editing
jobs on award winning projects, in particular with Salt and Tall Lighthouse while
keeping up his work as a freelance puzzle, quiz and popular reference writer.
Neither is this an exhaustive compilation of Lumsden’s work.

So while Lumsden carries an impressive nebula of works and achievements under
his belt it is still the big prizes like the TS Eliot and the Forward Prizes that elude
him. Given his professional success and recognised talent (many of his works
have been shortlisted for big prizes and/or made poetry book society choices)
how is it Lumsden is running his backwards race while the big successes of his
generation claim one prize after another? Sean O Brien’s collections Ghost Train,
Downriver and The Drowned Book have all won the Forward Prize for best poetry
collection of the year, making him the only poet to have won this award more
than once and Don Paterson’s collection Landing Light won both the TS Eliot Prize
and the Whitbread Poetry Award (now the Costa Poetry Award) followed by Rain
which won the Forward Prize for best Collection.

This strange effect could have less to do with conspiracies in the prize giving
department and more with Lumsden’s style. Roddy Lumsden’s work has a strange
relationship with time and context and most peculiarly with the work of other poets,
which keeps him fixed in an obscure position. If we look closely at Don Paterson’s
and Robin Robertson’s 90s work for example, Lumsden’s temporal difficulty becomes
a little clearer. From Don Paterson’s A Private Bottling (God’s Gift to Women, 1997):

Back in the same room that an hour ago
we had led, lamp by lamp into the darkness
I sit down and turn the radio on low
as the last girl on the planet still awake
reads a dedication to the ships
and puts on a recording of the ocean.

I carefully arrange a chain of nips
in a big fairy ring; in each square glass
the tincture of a failed geography,
its dwindles burns and woodlands, whin fires, heather,
the sklent of its wind and its salty rain,
the love worn habits of its working folk,
the waveform of their speech , and by extension
how they sing, make love, or take a joke.

And Roddy Lumsden’s Swanning (Yeah Yeah Yeah, 1997):

Odd, the things you think on, drinking alone:
the difference between a void and the void,
the spawn site of the conference fish,
the lyrics to green onions.

And on the way home, the moon leans over
the sill of the night and says, in my own voice,
‘Hey, Roddy, live slow, die young.’

Even back home, this Venetian blind
becomes a screen which promises,
coming soon, Liberty with a Mermaid’s Tail
And Babel, staring Buster Keaton.


Paterson and Lumsden both share a theme, a distinctive tightness of form and a
mythical quality that they bring to the world through metaphor, the biggest difference
though is probably contained in the latter. Paterson’s lone drinker is in a heavily dark,
mystic world, tied reverently if not religiously to the ancient and by dint of that to the
undercurrent of the superstitious which is bigger than the character of the lone drinker
(although by his confident narration he claims authority in relation to it). It is a style still
reeling from Eliot and trapped by Hughes where the known human world is not
thickened and revealed by metaphor but overtaken by a different dark, holy one.
This same world fills the pages of Robertson’s A Painted Field, also released in
1997 ‘Faulted silence, dislocation,/heat in the hissing trees;/ June tightens to a drum
head/that the rain begins to beat:/pavane, charade, sheherazade.’ (Storm) The
metaphors which Lumsden uses however are absurd, not grand or dark, they form
small private thoughts particular only to the lone drinker and leave the grand mythology
of the world out of the poem to form a personal mythology, images with great meaning
and promise to the world of the speaker alone, which well reflects lonely, drunken
contemplations. The mundane is thickened by the magical and the reader comes to an
understanding of the speaker through the sad comedy of his thoughts and motifs.
This is different to the typical work of Lumsden’s generation for which Paterson and
Robertson were two of the key voices.

Similarities between Lumsden’s work and the work of his Scottish contemporaries
definitely exist: points indirectly inferred by circling around them, great concepts contained
by tight forms and occasionally near impenetrable spiels of strangeness that infer feeling
or atmosphere but nothing that can be contained in a single sentence. Oddly though, many
and possibly more similarities may be noted between Yeah Yeah Yeah and The Book of
Love and the poetry being written by today’s generation, making Lumsden’s work
curiously atemporal. The personal mythologies and metaphors which invade the speaker’s
world, just like the moon in Lumsden’s Swanning are reminiscent of the animal metaphors
in Jack Underwood’s poetry which become so real they materialise into characters.
Lumsden’s propensity for creating his own forms is a fashion quickly catching on in the
Norwich spoken word scene, headed by the poet Russell J Turner, whose poetry is almost
identical to Lumsden’s Love-lies-bleeding in The Book of Love. Lumsden’s concept of a
life and love recorded has been borrowed by Caroline bird as has his sense of humour for
typically solemn subjects, which can just as easily be found in the poetry of Joe Dunthorne
(Aisle 16) and Heather Phillipson (Faber New Poets) though admittedly this humour fills
Lumsden’s poetry in tamer degrees. It is easy to see Lumsden as the austere older
brother of today’s poetic generation, with his links to the new and the old, his accessibility
and his obscurity which fill his books in varying ratios.

Owing both to his own generation and being owed by the current generation but fitting
none too comfortably with either it would seem that there is no place for Roddy
Lumsden among the ivy league of his own time and that he is condemned to a
privileged yet removed position today. It is perhaps no wonder then that it has been
difficult for Lumsden to secure the kind of recognition that his work deserves over
the course of such a long and impressive career, when because of his style, the flow
of time which seems to easily carry the rest of the writing elite has refused to carry
him. Each time a prize is involved, Lumsden is almost but not quite what the judge
most wants to see.

Poet George Szirtes was asked his thoughts on Lumsden’s work and where it may
be headed: ‘Roddy Lumsden is an important figure in his generation. A highly gifted
poet, he ranges widely, running on a sprightly imagination, crisp diction and a sure
sense of form. I think he is of roughly the same cast of mind as Luke Kennard.
Behind them both stands Paul Muldoon, or so it seems to me. I can't tell where
Roddy is going at any one time because he covers a lot of ground in all directions.
I expect his ground to widen still further, but also to deepen as time goes by.
’ In this summing up Szirtes touches on another complicating factor about Lumsden’s
work; while his covering a lot of ground is testament to Lumsden’s talent, thoroughness
and mystery, it is also what keeps Lumsden disadvantaged (metaphorically speaking)
with space as well as time.

In an interview with The Poetry Kit Lumsden said that ‘Getting an Eric Gregory
award...made a big difference, though I think that I won one too young and I couldn’t
back it up’. Yeah Yeah Yeah was the first full collection of Roddy Lumsden’s
poetry and in that collection it is possible to see the effort that went into backing
up that award. Yeah Yeah Yeah is a long first collection, it is exhaustive on the themes
of love, relationships, drinking and the world in relation to the self. With this book
Lumsden covers and impressive amount of ground, as Szirtes says, in all directions.
Lumsden has, so to speak, a finger in a great many possible pies of subject, spanning
a great breadth. Interestingly though, over time Lumsden’s subjects haven’t moved
onwards and upwards as such, they have in fact deepened, followed the same veins
and explored them slowly, incrementally. Widening and deepening, not sweeping
away to new territories.

This is seen easiest in Mischief Nights: New and Selected Poems, especially with
the commentary of Matthew Smith, who reviewed the book for Verse in 2005.
Describing the sections of the anthology Smith says ‘If Yeah Yeah Yeah is the nocturnal
chronicle of one man’s perfect sins, then the next two books are the hungover morning
after.’ He notes the similarity of theme and feeling between sections which are repeatedly
expressed with varying degrees of eloquence. ‘The restlessness that haunts this
sequence [Cavoli riscaldati] is no more defined than that which spurred the villainy
of the preceding section [Yeah Yeah Yeah], but this time it seems to have less potential.
Read one poem, and you’ll know where the rest are going to end up.’ And again this
theme with variations crops up in the section representative of Roddy Lumsden is Dead
‘The old questions and concerns return, but with a somewhat more sublime perspective.
Lost love is still lost, but retrieval is no longer the goal...Ultimately, his sentence hasn’t
changed, it’s just been clarified.’ This last comment is a perfect explanation of that
widening and deepening effect we may expect to see from Lumsden. He covered so
much space so quickly that now he paws at and tinkers with the same subjects, with
little else left to explore so it would seem, and though a lot of decent poetry has come
out of that tinkering it would seem that Roddy Lumsden has fixed himself to the furtive
activity and readers may never be able to guess just where it may go next (if
anywhere in particular) with its line of progression not so much a line but a circle, growing
like a puddle.

Third Wish Wasted is probably the collection which is most subversive of this circle
model, moving into the territory of dreams and dreams unrealised, often with dark folk
lore influences and dense instances of prophetic symbolism and shadowy emotion not
expressly tied to any one person, but floating, deep and frightening. But these are inevitably
overtaken by the inextinguishable Lumsden with his self awareness, dark humour and
his magical mundane. This collection is also the one, as previously mentioned, which won
the Bess Hoskin Prize, which when we consider Third Wish, the most thematically
progressive collection in the context of Lumsden’s previously unsuccessful circle model,
doesn’t seem so surprising.

Committing to this circular exploration of subject Roddy Lumsden has succeeded in
largely not following the trends of his more successful contemporaries, perhaps avoiding
prizes in this way but also avoiding the alarming propensity, particularly among the
Scottish part of his generation, for poetry which is often impressive but aloof and elite,
intelligent but on occasion difficult to empathise with, difficult to be moved by, not forgetting
an inexplicable collective fascination with Ovid and Dante which takes possession of the
poetic sensibility. So Lumsden can be proud of being a stand alone, peculiar and oftentimes
peculiarly good act, but it won’t win him any big prizes.

So if Lumsden shared something, but not much, in common with his generation at the
beginning of its time, because of his static potion in time and space, it would appear
that he shares very little with it now, that Lumsden fits into today’s prize winning scene
with small similarities within some big contrasts. But that of course all depends on
where he goes after Third Wish Wasted.

It may be right to imagine then, that when this present generation is finally handed over
to the next it will be Lumsden standing on top, bridging the gap between the two,
if only in a mysterious grand scheme of things and not accompanied by any viable
success. But as Szirtes says it is hard to see where Lumsden is going, the fact that
his progression has been so totally unlike that of his contemporaries may be a sign
that he has completely taken himself, so to speak, out of the pool of time, that he is
passing up a chance to be more greatly recognised, that he will pass with the old generation,
but that may be a long time yet. But likewise, perhaps Lumsden will prove to have
remarkable staying power in his consistency and the obstinate difficulty he causes when
critics try to place him.

Only time will tell how the prize givers decide to look at Lumsden’s ever spreading,
ever deepening work, whether he will at any point, ever fit the bill or whether he will
remain with his obscurity.


      Catherine Woodward

Catherine Woodward, originally from Lancashire, currently studies Literature and
Creative Writing at the University of East Anglia. Her debut poetry collection
Delusions of Grandeur is available from Ettrick Forest Press (http://www.efpress.com)

Tuesday, 21 September 2010

Poetry On The Move- a novel idea

I came across Poetry On The Move recently and it is a great concept. Publishing some poetry on A4 paper and then handing it out to commuters on the London Underground-fantastic! I imagine Rimbaud and his friends would have done the same thing-to find out more go to: http://www.undergroundpoetry.webs.com/

The Manic Street Preachers are Dead, Long Live The Manics!

I heard the Manic Street Preachers new single on the radio the other day. Awful absolutely awful and I was, ten years ago, their biggest fan-they should give up as they have not written a decent song for nearly a decade!

Emergency Verse: Poets Against Welfare Cuts

With the impending announcement of severe cuts in October, it seems that as always the poor will bear the brunt of these cutbacks; jobs are scarce and the govt intend to get those on incapacity benefit back into work- there is a misnomer about incapacity, as rich kids like George Osborne think its a "lifestyle choice"; is he mad? who in their right mind would want to live off £90 a week? this barely stretches to food and then you have bills, rent, t.v license, prescription charges, travel etc- as Secret Millionaire showed living off state benefits is not a lifestyle choice! and while George Osborne sips another glass of champagne on board some luxury yacht and his mates slap him on the back, telling him what a great job he is doing, families in estates all over the UK are wondering whether to feed themselves or go without electricity! Also a large percentage of those on benefits like incapacity make up a huge portion of people working in the volunteer sector.

show your disdain for the proposed cuts and download Emergency Verse an e-anthology of poets protesting at this challenge to our welfare rights:


http://www.therecusant.org.uk/

First Post

this is my first post; to start with I thought the Pope's visit to the UK went well, though I'm not sure I agree with everything he says; Christianity must find it's own way and with dwindling numbers going to church, it seems that there needs to be a miracle for a return to the numbers of say 50 years ago; life is more secular, and the role of the church has diminished in our society-yet the core of western civilisation is rooted in Christian principles, ethics and moral values-the fact that people do not go to church does not imply there is a lack of belief or faith in a God, but perhaps it is the Church as an institution that needs to change, become more modern and appeal to a new generation of worshippers.

I'll be using this blog to publish poets I think need more air play and I'll be putting up reviews of poetry and my thoughts on the poetry scene, as well as making cultural, political and social comments.