BlogPoetry

Bronwyn’s Book Launch, Newcastle Writers Festival

5 April

Stranded, Flying Islands Press

 

A book of poems.

Wyn with Liz Murphy, also having her book launched

My launch speech

Bronwyn has published 5 novels, 3 collections of short fiction and one of poetry. She was also a finalist in the Newcastle Poetry Prize, 2023. And her short stories have, in the last few months, had a run of success. She is represented in the centenary anthology of the Society of Women Writers. ‘Stranded’ is her first professionally published book.

A big thank you to the absent Kit Kelen for the hard yakka he has put into promoting poetry and poets. And it’s great to be here, we missed the original launch at Markwell with Covid!

Her poems are alive, they talk to us. Often as quiet presences that draw us into a life from childhood on. She left home early. Her poems can be fierce and poignant regarding family dynamics. They also reflect the grit of the world, as when she visits her parent’s Ireland for the first time.

From a Dublin hostel:

Someone has drawn a chain of tiny penises above

my pillow. I worry about money. A cloud shifts

behind the Haiku leaves and they silhouette.

My pen-knife lies open on my towel, still red

from Zambezi mud. A Welsh football team

is moving in and flaunting their all-rightness

with loud, flecked voices . . .

Outside a man sings ‘Not at all, not at all’

in just the right way. ‘Jim knows nothing about

women,’ said his wife (not Molly but almost).

Someone hums the beginning of Sunshine of your

Love. ‘Mothers Day cards. Cheap.’ ‘50p. cheap.’

‘Cigreet lighters four f’ra Punt’, the pramsellers

move on.

 

Many poems derive from journal entries with honed perceptions, keen eyed encounters, often open ended. Take the poem ‘Bulahdelah’:

Clouds wipe us out

we have no shadows

head for the carnival rotunda

and look out into them

wait for the burst

cool wet

white ducks languish

on the river shore.

Locals talk

it’s four years since the last flood

we’ve been here five years now

this bloke keeps looking at me

just in case, he’s got that

still drunk from last night old black

pants no shirt look: great.

There’s a round gold tree

with a square shadow

in the strip of sunlight left

across the plain.

 

Sensitivity to place runs through the collection. Then there’s surprises, like the poem ‘Monster’. Reminding me Bronwyn has four poems in last years international anthology of surrealist poetry from the US.

Congratulations to my partner. I feel lucky that she has dedicated this collection to me.

Show More

Related Articles

Back to top button