Liz Lefroy and Jonty Watt, a Tasmanian Poetry Festival event – 16th Nov 2023

Liz Lefroy and Jonty Watt – Launceston, November 16th 2023.

 

Liz Lefroy

Visiting UK poet Liz Lefroy

Liz’s opening poems of the evening involved “that very British sport of queuing,” the first of which – “In the Queue in the Waitrose Cafe, I Meet My Love” – can be read online at Liz’s website, at Liz Lefroy – Poet.

Liz and Jonty Lefroy

Liz: “I love noticing the small things that happen in life. And that’s kind of what happens in the next poem in which my son Jonty, who I’m absolutely delighted has been travelling with me for half the time we’ve been in Australia, features. It’s called ‘Michelangelo’s David'”.

(In a personal blog post back in July of 2016, Liz explained this poem is also set in a queue, but in Florence. ‘… it’s also about love, language, and the fluidity and permeability of borders between people and cultures. It’s about the joy of the taken-for-grantedness of those exchanges: it’s about knowing the words pizza, gelato, cappuccino without having to try. I read the poem with new energy, as an act of poetry.’

I didn’t plan for this, queuing with my son …

 

Liz Evie and Jonty

Liz, Evie and Jonty

 

Liz Lefroy, Erin Coull, Sophie Campbell and Zeke Lanham

Liz: “I’ve wanted to come to Australia since I was twelve, when I touched down and we were coming out of the airport in Perth I felt emotional and moved … even caught up with an old schoolfriend in Sydney the other day.”

“So yes to friendship! Yes to poetry! Thank you for having me, really appreciate it. I also want to say: shall we give our young poets another round of applause … Evie had said to me, how would it be having some young local poets read first, and I can’t think of anything better to do. In my other life, I’m a teacher….’


Colin, wrapping up: “Once again, thank you very much Liz and Jonty, this was more than I could have anticipated, a really interesting, amazing experience. I really like the feeling I get from your poem about Western Australia – taking what is the everyday and reminding us that it’s a very different world here physically from the one from where you’ve come. Thanks very much people for turning out, I was really glad that we could get Liz and Jonty into this session and it’s reminded us that we can extend the poetry festival with one-off events such as this throughout the year. I’ll very briefly mention the fact that we’ve been mightily supported this year by the Launceston City Council and by Stella and Harry Kent as well as by other sponsors, and I think it’s important we carry that support over into the fortieth anniversary of the poetry festival next year, making it the longest poetry gig of its kind in Australia. Once again, thank you very much … really impressive.”

Pub to Park – a Bothwell storytelling event, Tasmania, Fri 1st December

A Bothwell storytelling event featuring Kim Nielsen-Creeley, Marilyn Arnold, Tim Hurburgh and Mallika Naguran.

Friday 1 December at the BoHo (Bothwell Hotel) from 3-6 pm.

Listen to stories and poems on highland life and love, over wine, cheese and crackers.

Kim Nielsen-Creeley is a Launceston-based writer and poet. She has released a chap book titled Roughly, and is ready to submit a full length poetry book. Kim is active in the local poetry scene as presenter and emcee. She has been interviewed and read on local and ABC radio. She has assisted to create poetry events in the local poetry scene, and also blogs on-line.

Marilyn Arnold, also from Launceston, has two books of poetry: Capture, written with Carol Easton, and Lies, Lovers and Other Constructions. An award-winning poet, Marilyn is the inaugural president of the Tasmanian Branch of the Society of Women Writers and a committee member of the Tasmanian Poetry Festival. She runs regular poetry open mic and workshop sessions. Marilyn has written about nature in the central highlands, having lived in Hamilton in her previous life!

Tim Hurburgh is an architect, writer and poet who grew up on the Derwent River north of Hobart. The Ouse resident has released his first book of poetry, Disruptions: Tasmania in Poetry. Tim’s second book, Tall Poplars: Tales of Tasmania’s fabled Derwent Valley is a collection of short stories. When not penning poems or weaving tales, Tim sends ping-pong balls whizzing past hot ears in the disused district school uphill.

Mallika Naguran is a short story and children’s stories writer who will soon be published as a novelist. Her debut story collection, She Never Looks Quite Back, has been shortlisted for a book award. She is the founder of Pub to Park Storytelling, which features published authors, poets and new voices live across Tasmania. The city-turned-country girl is now always woken up too early by eager roosters in Ouse.

Cheese platter $10 per head. Wine/whiskey/tea/coffee extra.

RSVP to Mallika Naguran by email: malnag@hotmail.com or text 0459 352 532

Venue: Bothwell Hotel of the Highlands, 15 Alexander Street, Bothwell, Tasmania.

The musical genius of Julie Fowlis – ‘Hùg air a Bhonnaid Mhor’

The musical genius of Julie Fowlis in Concert at ABC Glasgow January 2008

‘Hùg air a Bhonnaid Mhor’

 

From North Uist in Scotland’s Outer Hebrides, Julie Fowlis is probably the most successful artist ever to work with predominantly Scots Gaelic material and has some high-profile fans, including BjörkRicky Gervais, and Phil Selway of Radiohead. While Runrig and Capercaillie had previously achieved breakthroughs of sorts with isolated outbreaks of Gaelic-language material, Fowlis threw caution to the wind and achieved surprising mainstream acceptance concentrating almost exclusively on the Gaelic tradition.

(From Colin Irwin’s biography of Julie Fowlis at allmusic.com at https://www.allmusic.com/artist/julie-fowlis-mn0000868391#biography)

 

 

 

Australian poetry news — Five Islands Press

Oystercatcher Enterprises Ltd, a not-for-profit company recently founded by Mark Tredinnick and Steve Meyrick, is proud to announce its intention to revive Five Islands Press as a publisher of new poetry and writing about poetry and other lyric works.

Founded in 1986 by Ron Pretty, and named for the five islands off Port Kembla, where Ron lived and wrote, Five Islands has published many of Australia’s finest poets. When Ron stepped back from active involvement with the press in 2007, the fine publishing tradition that he established was continued for over a decade by his successors, with the Press publishing a further 44 books by emerging and established poets before announcing, in 2018, that it would cease publishing new work. Since 2020, the imprint has been managed by Dr Gareth Jenkins, Managing Editor of Apothecary Archive.

Dr Jenkins welcomed the change. “It has been a pleasure connecting with Five Islands readers and writers over the last three years. I always felt like I was just an archivist of the press and its long history so I’m very pleased it will get a new lease of life through Mark and Steve’s initiative.”

Mark Tredinnick, Managing Editor of Five Islands, outlined Oystercatcher’s plans. “It’s our intention to publish at the press an exciting range of new titles, the best lyric work of our best writers, poetry that is timeless and timely, intelligent and intelligible, beautiful and urgent, poetry that is both accomplished and accessible to audiences well beyond the poetry specialists who are most of the readers of new poetry at present.”

“We’re grateful to Gareth for agreeing to transfer the imprint to our new company, and for his vital role in preserving the imprint during a period when its history and tradition of the press could well have been lost.”, Dr Tredinnick said, “I’m really pleased that Gareth has agreed to collaborate with Oystercatcher in rebuilding FIP as we grow it and, with luck, change the shape of Australian poetry, in particular broadening its readership.”

“Our aims are close to those that the founder of Five Islands Press, the late Ron Pretty, spent his life promoting,” explained Mark. “In his own poetry, in his writings on the craft, in his teaching and mentoring and, importantly through Five Islands Press, Ron wanted to make poetry that took people deeper into their daily lives and minds. And he wanted that poetry to reach readers who might not otherwise read it. So, in responding to what we see as the urgent need for more poetry publishing in Australia—especially of lyric poetry, poetry of wisdom and accomplishment and craft—it seemed sensible to carry on what Ron began, to revive a revered press he founded and, with others like Kevin Brophy, built into the most respected poetry press of its day.”

“I owe a debt to Steve Meyrick, too, a fine emerging poet, for seeing in the renewal of Five Islands a way to do some good, of the kind we’re both committed to—for poetry, for the manifold Australian poetries, and the places and lives they witness—while also honouring a press that has already done so much pioneering work in these areas. Steve lives on Wodi Wodi land, within sight of the five islands, and I’m not far inland on Gundungurrah country, so it gives us great joy to rebirth this press where it began. Poetry’s realm, it has been said, is the parish or the watershed, and it is the world. That idea guides our hopes for the press, and the oystercatchers of the shores of the five islands will hold us accountable.”

Steve, who was formerly CEO of a successful economics consultancy, will take on the role of Commercial Director of Five Islands Press. “Much work lies ahead of us, developing the structures and processes that will enable Five Islands Press to become again—and remain—a force in poetry publishing for many years”, Steve said. “We expect it’ll be twelve months before our publishing activity fully hits its stride. But we’re excited to announce that the first publication of the Five Islands Press in its new incarnation is Mark Tredinnick’s Nine Carols, a small book of carols written by Mark, which Alan Holley has set for four voices. The Australian Chamber Choir, which first commissioned Holley to write them some carols, premiered one of the carols (“The Carol of the Two Crows”) in 2022 and will sing that and “Koel Carol” in its 2023 Christmas series; Fiore Ensemble sings three more of them this November in Melbourne, and the book, including a new Advent Overture (a ghazal) written for the occasion, appears in November to catch the Christmas trade to accompany the performances by ACC and Fiore. The book is stunningly designed and illustrated by Gerhard Bachfischer, and printed and stitch-bound by Carbon8 in Marrickville. It perfectly showcases these beautiful contemporary carols, instances of the plainspoken lyricism Five Islands hopes to publish more of in its reincarnation. Other publishing initiatives will be announced early in 2024.”

Small Press Network — Book of the Year Award 2023

News from Small Press Network’s latest newsletter…

BOTY shortlist
We recently announced the six books shortlisted for this year’s SPN Book of the Year Award (plus two titles that received honourable mentions from the judges).

They are:

  • The Branded (Jo Riccioni, Pantera)
  • Our Members Be Unlimited (Sam Wallman, Scribe)
  • Paradise (Point of Transmission) (Andrew Sutherland, Fremantle Press)
  • Against Disappearance: Essays on Memory (ed. by Leah Jing McIntosh & Adolfo Aranjuez, Liminal/Pantera)
  • Mabu Mabu (Nornie Bero, Hardie Grant)
  • Losing Face (George Haddad, UQP).

Honourable mentions go to Lockdown (Chip Le Grand, Monash University Press) and This All Come Back Now: An Anthology of First Nations Speculative Fiction (ed. by Mykaela Saunders, UQP).

The winner will be announced on Friday 24 November. The award event will be hosted by the Wheeler Centre as part of their ‘Next Big Thing’ series

See https://smallpressnetwork.com.au/book-of-the-year-award/book-of-the-year-award-2023-shortlist/ for more details.