Murray Edmond
Auckland University Press
Quardle oodle ardle wardle doodle, sung Glover's magpies.
Murray Edmond's poems are, like the bird, sometimes monochromatic jester, sometimes crooner, sometimes curator of eclectic artefacts. They are your quintessential kiwi icon and your foreign fraudster. Most of all, they are playful and lyrical.
Edmond's latest collection is a quartet, with poems subsumed under the titles 'praise', 'nonsense', 'blues' and 'pop'. Don't expect these poems to conform to their taxonomy. There is plenty of nonsense in 'praise' and profundity in 'nonsense'.
European literati, philosophers, and characters from fiction stumble into New Zealand suburbia. We natter with Sartre in the Waikato. The Ancient Mariner is spotted in Avondale, amongst 'loan-sharks and two-dollar shops'. Nietzsche's 'Eternal Return' plays out in Glen Eden. There are poems for writers too. A poem for Lisa Samuels pays homage to her experimentalist lexicon, with its image of ‘roundabouts of neoliberal multiplicity’, whilst ‘Kiss the Impossible Good Night’ tips its hat to Kendrick Smithyman. There are many references, but this is not esoteric verse. It has too much fun for that.
Murray Edmond is a dramaturge and, in his poetry, characters caper across the stage – an imaginary camera panning from one scene to another. In ‘The Poet Returns to New York’ we are privy to something of a Vaudeville procession of celebrity artists. There’s playwright and poet, Frederico Garcia Lorca, and ‘Leonard Cohen out with his daughter’ and Frank O’Hara who ‘strolls on by in pyjamas’. Edmond transports the reader back to Hairy-Maclary-of-Donaldson’s-Dairy type rhymes of childhood. In moments of hilarity ‘Lorca’ is rhymed with ‘gawker’ is rhymed with ‘daughter’ is rhymed with ‘everyman-and-his-dog New Yorker’.
Edmond is like the class clown of a philosophy tutorial. He is the Goth dressed in fuchsia pink. Cut through the Dadaist gameplay, linguistic cartwheels and downright silliness, and there’s a good deal of existential angst to be found. There are lovers at the end of the world. There is loneliness and there is mortal anxiety. But everywhere is music, and any angst is met with clever quips that register like Smiths lyrics – ‘I used to love you darling / now you’re just my hobby’.
Auckland University Press
Quardle oodle ardle wardle doodle, sung Glover's magpies.
Murray Edmond's poems are, like the bird, sometimes monochromatic jester, sometimes crooner, sometimes curator of eclectic artefacts. They are your quintessential kiwi icon and your foreign fraudster. Most of all, they are playful and lyrical.
Edmond's latest collection is a quartet, with poems subsumed under the titles 'praise', 'nonsense', 'blues' and 'pop'. Don't expect these poems to conform to their taxonomy. There is plenty of nonsense in 'praise' and profundity in 'nonsense'.
European literati, philosophers, and characters from fiction stumble into New Zealand suburbia. We natter with Sartre in the Waikato. The Ancient Mariner is spotted in Avondale, amongst 'loan-sharks and two-dollar shops'. Nietzsche's 'Eternal Return' plays out in Glen Eden. There are poems for writers too. A poem for Lisa Samuels pays homage to her experimentalist lexicon, with its image of ‘roundabouts of neoliberal multiplicity’, whilst ‘Kiss the Impossible Good Night’ tips its hat to Kendrick Smithyman. There are many references, but this is not esoteric verse. It has too much fun for that.
Murray Edmond is a dramaturge and, in his poetry, characters caper across the stage – an imaginary camera panning from one scene to another. In ‘The Poet Returns to New York’ we are privy to something of a Vaudeville procession of celebrity artists. There’s playwright and poet, Frederico Garcia Lorca, and ‘Leonard Cohen out with his daughter’ and Frank O’Hara who ‘strolls on by in pyjamas’. Edmond transports the reader back to Hairy-Maclary-of-Donaldson’s-Dairy type rhymes of childhood. In moments of hilarity ‘Lorca’ is rhymed with ‘gawker’ is rhymed with ‘daughter’ is rhymed with ‘everyman-and-his-dog New Yorker’.
Edmond is like the class clown of a philosophy tutorial. He is the Goth dressed in fuchsia pink. Cut through the Dadaist gameplay, linguistic cartwheels and downright silliness, and there’s a good deal of existential angst to be found. There are lovers at the end of the world. There is loneliness and there is mortal anxiety. But everywhere is music, and any angst is met with clever quips that register like Smiths lyrics – ‘I used to love you darling / now you’re just my hobby’.
Tender Machines
Emma Neale
Otago University Press
Emma Neale
Otago University Press
‘Tender Machines’ is not an oxymoron - it
is more a love affair between disparities. Emma Neale’s latest collection tugs
together the bestial and the mechanical, emotion and its chemical
underpinnings, the cyber network and human intimacy. Neale zigzags the
dialectic, exploring the seams between terms that are ostensibly
irreconcilable. Science and fairytale are married. Love is captured in data.
The line between ‘Goodies’ and ‘Baddies’ is muddied. There is something
unforced about this collection, and yet it is hefty in its scope. It takes on
social injustice, technological anxiety, climate issues, popular culture, but
also the nuanced study of humanity at its most solitary and vulnerable.
This is verse with a sense of potency. It
reaches beyond its causal nexus, and taps society on the shoulder. It has a
message. But this poetry wants to walk the talk, get its hands a little dirty:
‘This poem knows a couple of kids.
It wants to go into their homes
and put in insulation, double-glazed windows,
leave a week’s worth of groceries, exterminate the rats’
It wants to go into their homes
and put in insulation, double-glazed windows,
leave a week’s worth of groceries, exterminate the rats’
Neale writes around our dissociation from
ourselves, and our embeddedness within social media platforms, and our fixation
with data. Her people ‘Googled ‘how to stay in love’’ or do battle with Siri
(‘I am Siri-us’) or update their Facebook statuses and search for ‘likes’.
Somewhere within all this, it seems we have lost our humanity - ‘we have
steeled ourselves’. Neale asks ‘Can you verify you are a human being, not a
robot?’. The question is unsettling. It rattles the Ghost in the Machine.
Neale’s world is at once terrifying and
familiar. It is the snug apocalypse we have shuffled into. Perhaps it is not
the end of the world – more an end of Self as we know it, but this is equally
worrying. All is not lost, however – not just yet. There is tenderness. These
are tender, sometimes lonely, and very often baffled, machines:
‘What if the baddies are just scared,
hungry,
don’t have a home, they’re cold and lonely’.
don’t have a home, they’re cold and lonely’.
I often have good things to say about the
poetry I encounter. There are many clever writers, saying many clever things.
Emma Neale has rebooted the machine, adjusting the settings. Poetry is often
seen as an indulgence. ‘Tender Machines’ is crucial and timely. We may be
teetering at the edge of losing our humanity. Neale has a mirror and a fistful
of questions.
‘About the reviewer:
Elizabeth Morton is a poet and sometimes student. She
has a keen interest in neuroscience. In her free time she collects obscure
words in supermarket bags. She is a promiscuous reader, but her chief love is
poetry. Her own poetry has been published in Poetry NZ, Takahe, JAAM, Blackmail
Press, Meniscus and Shot Glass Journal, amongst other
places. In 2013 she was winner of the New Voices, Emerging Poets competition.
She was highly commended in the 2015 Kathleen Grattan Award.
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