Ali Alizadeh Reviews Ian McBryde

DomainDomain by Ian McBryde
Five Islands Press, 2004

In the media release for Ian McBryde's latest collection, Domain, Peter Porter states that World War II and the Holocaust &#151 the content of McBryde's collection &#151 have been “subjects defiant of poetry”. Here, I think, Porter is trying to make a claim for this collection's uniqueness. While this powerful book is in many ways unique, I find Porter's claim strangely ignorant: many poems have been written about this darkest period of history by, amongst others, some of the best known poets of the 20th Century such as Yevgeny Yevtushenko, WH Auden, Randall Jarrell, Primo Levy, Geoffrey Hill and Czeslaw Milosz.
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Rob Walker Reviews Deb Matthews-Zott

Shadow SelvesShadow Selves by Deb Matthews-Zott
Ginninderra Press, 2003

Poetry about erotic desire is fraught with perils. Just look at some of the worst on thousands of teen websites and you'll get some idea of just how bad it can get! Contrast this with Shadow Selves, Deb Matthews-Zott's latest work, and the difference is striking, showing a sophistication that welds the physical to the intellectual. She achieves all this without resorting to anatomical diatribe. But it's still hot.
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Bev Braune Reviews Luke Davies

Luke Davies's TotemTotem by Luke Davies
Allen and Unwin, 2004

The efficacy and strength of Luke Davies' Totem lie in its drawing on a long familiar tradition of mythological narratives as a vehicle for romantic verse-tellers – from Publius Ovidius Naso (known to us as Ovid), to Giovanni Boccaccio, to John Milton. Davies' tastes are eclectic; he even tries a poem in Jamaican English, such as it is generally recognised in reggae songs, in one in the series entitled '40 Love Poems' following his 'Totem Poem'.

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James Stuart Reviews Luke Davies

Luke Davies's TotemTotem by Luke Davies
Allen and Unwin, 2004

I'll let you in on a secret: I think Luke Davies is in love.

OK. So it's not much of a secret. Still, while descriptions on the jacket refer to it in a variety of glowing terms (‘A sustained aria' &#151 Peter Porter; ‘the great Australian long poem' &#151 Judith Beveridge) what they basically elide is that ‘Totem Poem', and its 40 companion poems are pretty much all about love. And so we pass the microphone to Davies.
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Moses Iten Reviews rattapallax 10

rattapallax 10rattapallax 10, Ram Devineni (ed)
NYC, 2004

I have to admit, I picked up issue 10 of rattapallax for 'The Age of MC SOLAAR' cover story. Although my French is still very limited, I have had quite a few tracks by the Senegal-born, Paris-bred, hip-hop superstar on high rotation for several years. Undoubtedly, his flow alone is dope enough for heads of any language.

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Postcard from Cardiff

When I arrive in a new territory, I sniff it out, find spots that I like and leave my own scent, which is what I did when I came to Cardiff. Cardiff's likeable in many ways: friendly peeps, a public transport system that actually works and enough stationery and book shops to keep a writer happy. But in one essential part, Cardiff has failed me.

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Q&A with Johanna Featherstone

Johanna Featherstone established The Red Room Company in 2003. Based in Sydney, Red Room creates, promotes and publishes new poetry by Australian writers in unusual ways. Paul Mitchell spoke to her recently about her work. Continue reading

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Q&A with Justin Heazlewood

Justin Heazlewood writes regularly for BMA and Voiceworks. He is, however, better known for his role as Triple J's “Bedroom Philosopher,” a character he continued to develop at the recent Melbourne Comedy Festival. Here he talks to Benny Walter about his comedy in depth.

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Q&A with Ian McBryde

Domain is without exception the most difficult and challenging poetry collection I have ever tackled. It involved almost four years of steady research and writing. It had a profound effect on me, and caused many a night of uneasy sleep. I found myself quite overcome by a lot of the imagery and literature, which hung around me in a sad, invisible, cloying sort of way.” Ian McBryde talks about his latest collection of poetry.

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Slivers

The nets. the horses, the nets.

White noise carries too many messages.

Your diamonds are invisible, but hide them anyway.

The swings of the playground are aflame.

The best voice in the choir can belong to a monster.

Somewhere in Texas, farmhouses are burning.

Old women's tears weigh more than our planet.

The cliffs are much closer than we think.

Next door the drapes stay closed.

There are more than fourteen stations of the cross.

A blind girl senses air movement, wonders who has entered.

The nets. the horses, the nets.

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Billy Bragg and the Fight for a New Australia

Thatcherism was the name given to the tide of economic rationalism that swept through Britain in the 1980's. It was a series of often forceful policy reforms and social upheavals that transformed the nation economically, politically, socially and philosophically. Musically, the nation was mute. The original f&^k you of punk's first wave, which was quite often only ever protest for protests sake, had all but died. In its place the superficiality of New Wave and the introspection of Goth reigned supreme.
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Ethics in the Kitchen

I'm living off pasta to get over you –
you can tell. A big jar next to the stove.
Just penne and butter. The French way?

Spent two thirds of my rent last week
being Pandora. Can-opening wounds
from my last squeeze blended with love

that will not come. This tastes of
camping: cheap cask red and carbohydrates,
to compensate for that CD I bought

which I didn't want but hoped
would make me feel better. Now I think:
can cook for myself, don't need you,

while a tiny creature watches, chuckles,
then remains silent on the curtain rail.
You see, I have this theory that if

she never opened that box I could
believe that noodles can be a substitute
for all things, a leveller of desire (al dente)-

as it is, I maneuver wheat onto my tongue
in order to keep away from the phone;
as if, calling you, I may unfasten a hinge.

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Ghost Writing

Lapsed vegetarian, lapsed Jew
we connect at absurd points
(one discreet eater of bacon to another)
memory like the old story
about the blind men & the elephant
each groping for proof
you will insist on your version
how you sang Lara's Theme
till your ribs cracked.

You persist by remembering
the story you tell like an alibi
trying to reconstruct an atmosphere
out of air wearing thin. I did not
forget my God. My God
forgot me
.

When your God writes, his medium
is fire-no one can erase it.
& that's what you want, a story
whole, indestructible, Mr. Spielberg
on your doorstep, the reverse eclipse
of flash bulbs in the dark
applause to eat silence.

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Homage to John Allyn Smith

'I thought new disappointments impossible'
said poor Henryman;
The whiskers flew well enough
but that bridge was a hundred foot
high
                                                             (Yes, yes, it came as a shock to all of
                                                             us)

Those five years burying Bradstreet
might have been better spent my friend –
you remember the boobs they
gave those prizes to when we were
kids
                                                             (My girl says good poems don't need
                                                             an explanation, John. I wonder about
                                                             good poets)

Your father studied the problem
from all angles, and though
you trusted in a forty-year faith
                                                              (Blossoms            What?)
I have a hunch it was Mrs Smith
outside the bedroom with
the shotgun that drove you,
pal. No dream, no
song.

-Old friends you say, Bones?
                                                             (Old acquaintances would be better)

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Justin Langer

to the three trees which stood at
stood trees covered drive stood at the
entrance to a covered langer looks the
drought in the eyes three trees at the

entrance to a covered drive
langer looks        the drought
drives drives to the desert in the
has a       no

nolan had the drought langer drives
___________________
to dimboola langer has has had at
3rd slip langer has no land langer has

has a laconic stance lehmann face
nolan has no langer
justin land is a landscape lehmann
face       landscape

the desert has sheds
lehmann face
landscape
the desert has sheds

dressing time sheds away
langer enoys a dance in the dressing sheds
for time stepping away forward stepping boof boof
before stepping away before his country boof

before stepping up to bat for
before his justin
country justin langer enjoys a dance
before stepping up to bat

before three trees before a country entrance
for his country
three proust trees
at the entrance to a covered drive

lehmann steps away langer enjoys stepping
up to dance for his country drives
bats stumps
drives into dimboola drives stumps

into time three entrance to the
little desert three entrance stumps
little justin laconic entrance to proust
with a laconic paddle brings up

____________________________________
boof steps about before time before country
brings up with a laconic paddle for his country boof
partnership boof brings up steps away has a laconic paddle shot

it is all about the partnerships katich knows justin
it is
________
not shot

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Syd Barrett’s Threnodic Devotion

After Syd Barrett broke with Pink Floyd, the band that he founded and led, his recorded solo work was assembled onto three albums: The Madcap Laughs (1969), Barrett (1970), and Opel (recorded 1968-70, released 1988/93). Herein is found a transcription of threnodic devotion, alienation, and madness comparable to that of the German poet Friedrich Holderlin (writing two hundred years ago).
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Perfect Deaths

Isadora.

Donald Campbell,
trying to catch his father,
flipped over and over
by a wavelet
on the specially calm lake.

Marie Collier,
`passionate',
from a hotel window in New York.

Ramon Novarro
with a lead dildo –
a gift from Valentino –
and twin demented whores.

Amy Johnson,
ferrying a plane.

Chatterton?

And Joe.

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45

life unravelling
how it arrives at truth
not the same thing as what is true
they can't work at it
every skeleton has fifteen bodies – more!
every body has thirteen mouths – they could be eaten
all at once!
they not only become dizzy trying to think about
their countries
they watch as people
become small inside
they pay money to hear their own voices,
the voices of those they love
they stand in public feeding money into the inanimate
breathing the voice into what might be coveted
they disdain
they are seduced
they disdain
there are things they could quite easily be aware of
they think the dead are lost
they think they can find the dead
they do not look for the time they are wasting
they do not know that that time is accumulating on a plate
that is offered to them
when asked about it they say it runs out
they have become very sensitive to pain
they are very aware of pain
they ignore pain
they let their arms hang down and not only this
they have forgotten the true meaning of the hand
what do their lungs do?
they do not know
nor anymore how to possess what occurs
what other way is there?
why do they not ask?
their prayers and requests all have to do
with an excess of desire
everything becomes beautiful, all heroic
as they reduce their world to understanding
as they understand the cosmos
as they understand god
they countenance evolution to here
but not from this point
they do not believe how what they know
kills depth

 
MTC Cronin has published seven books and three booklets of poetry, the most recent being a Spanish/English edition of her 2001 book, Talking to Neruda's Questions, translated by Juan Garrido Salgado (SAFO, Santiago, Chile, 2004) and 1 – 100, (Shearsman Press, UK, 2004). Tatjana Lukic is translating a collection of her work into Bosnian and Serbian. She currently lives in Maleny, Australia, with her partner and three young daughters and is completing a PhD on poetry and law.

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