Poetry
Kate Llewellyn’s poetry is immediately accessible and clear, but not simplistic. She is completely at ease, unlike most writers, with reading her work aloud; this may be a function of an eminently readable style of writing, or the reverse, where the style follows .the demands of reading aloud. Either way, it works.
... (read more)Poem of Thanksgiving and Other Poems edited by Paul Kavanagh & Poems Selected From The Australian’s 20th Anniversary’ edited by Judith Rodriguez and Andrew Taylor
by Barbara Giles •
Beware the Bougainvillea by Donna McSkimming & the bitumen rhino by Neil Paech
by John Irving •
Boy with A Telescope by Jan Owen & The Twofold Place by Alan Gould
by Chris Wallace-Crabbe •
The Orange Tree: South Australian poetry to the present day edited by K.F. Pearson and Christine Churches
by Barbara Giles •
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)