Michael Haslam, The Quiet Works.
Oystercatcher Press. £4.00 A5 16pp. ISBN: 978-1-905885-21-3.
This pamphlet, which I've just bought, comes highly recommended. Haslam is one of our elder-statesman, a contemporary of Peter Riley and Lee Harwood. His work is like neither of theirs, consisting of highly-wrought lyrical utterances, though, like Riley, he investigates landscape as a palimpset, a layered record of social history, and the individual's place within it. "The Quiet Works" is "the latest, or last, of a Work, under the general title 'Continuale Song' in print (2009) in the following books: Mid Life (Shearsman 2007), The Music Laid Her Songs in Language (Arc 2001), A Sinner Saved by Grace (Arc 2005), and A Cure for Woodness (Arc 2009). Details of these publications may be found here.
The poetry works best when read out loud, which brings out its alliterative music:
Disquieted poor lover stumbles in defeat
as yelping plover tips the tumbril, tumbles
from a troubled youth his mill-shed fumbles
through to elders' umbral gloom and grumbles
where waters meet in derelicted darkness,
at a confluence of brooks: the spill of self disgorged
where goit-wall crumbles into streaming turmoil.
Great stuff from Peter Hughes' Oystercatcher Press; it was great to see it pick up the Michael Marks Publishers'Award (for outstanding UK publisher of poetry in pamphlet form).
Wednesday, September 9, 2009
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6 comments:
Haslam's the don, isn't he? I think he should be compulsory in all schools across the country. His Ostercatcher book's on my reading list, though I didn't know about the new Arc collection. That's brightened my day, that has.
Simon Turner, Gists and Piths
That makes four or five Oystercatcher titles on my 'to buy' list now - time to send a cheque, I think.
I've enjoyed the two I've got - by Alastair Noon and Emily Critchley
Mike Haslam is certainly one of the good guys - as poet, editor, bloke. To have him described as elder statesman makes me feel old, though ;-)
Hey, Alan, if possible, can you order up some must-have chapbooks for me which I'll gladly pay you for (inclshipping handling all that stuff) when we meet up in London? Thx.
Ah, imagine a world where someone like Michael Haslam was on the school curriculum!
If someone wanted to get a snapshot of current UK innovative poetry - in all its variety - they could simply buy the complete set of Oystercatcher pamphlets.
Aidan - I know the feeling...
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