Poetry
Beware the Bougainvillea by Donna McSkimming & the bitumen rhino by Neil Paech
Boy with A Telescope by Jan Owen & The Twofold Place by Alan Gould
The Orange Tree: South Australian poetry to the present day edited by K.F. Pearson and Christine Churches
No Collars No Cuffs, plenty of fisticuffs, and you’ll probably get K.O.’d by all this, after a round or two of three or four poems each. You may need someone in your corner to bolster you, for as Geoff Goodfellow writes in ‘Skin Deep’, a women’s prison poem:
... (read more)Chris Wallace-Crabbe reviews 'Poems for an Exhibition' by R.H. Morrison, 'Outer Charting' by Hal Colebatch, and 'The Flower Industry' by Andrew Sant
The three books under review here promote no generalisation about the condition of poetry, the health of the beast, unless they call to mind the difference between poems which are interesting from line to line and those which somehow resonate as wholes. R.H. Morrison, the eldest of the three poets, is the one who most often produces whole poems, at least to my ear.
... (read more)The Typewriter Considered As Bee-trap by Martin Johnston & Fast Forward by Peter Porter
Selected Poems 1971-1982 by Pamela Brown & Manners of an Astronaut by Gig Ryan
Just over a year ago a group of Melbourne poets who all had manuscripts ready for publication discovered the urgent need for a press devoted entirely to poetry.
The major publishers were booked out several years ahead just dealing with their regular authors, and as their poetry lists were limited to a handful of volumes each year the chances of acceptance were minimal. Moreover, these publishing houses are commercial ventures, and the need to show a return prevents them from taking too many risks.
... (read more)