Month: July 2012
An Interview With Jan Hutchison
Jan Hutchison was born in Petone and educated at Victoria University and the New Zealand Library School. She has worked in the Justice Department, spent time overseas, and been a librarian in Wellington, Dunedin and Nelson.
Jan lives in Christchurch with Hamish and says that poetry is a significant part of her life. She wrote constantly as a child and she returned to writing poetry after her own children left home. David Howard encouraged her and she joined the Poetry Collective where she appreciated meeting others with similar interests. She belongs to a poetry group which meets regularly and values its lively exchange of views.
She writes for Amnesty International and at present is improving her skills in Maori language.
Her poems are represented in many anthologies and publications and more recently in Snorkel and Quadrant (Australia). Steele Roberts published her three collections: The Long Sleep is Over, Days Among Trees, and The Happiness of Rain. Recently, she won first prize in The Takahe International Poetry Competition, 2011.
I don’t write the poems in a systematic order but try to arrange a collection of poems – after I’ve finally completed them – in a way that allows them to engage with others on the page opposite or near by. Nor do I plan a particular poem. I stop what I’m thinking and expecting and stay present for the poem as long as it takes.
My poetry is an expression of faith in the integrity of the senses and faith in the imagination. I want my poems to be connected with the natural world, with myths and animals, dreams and erotic life.
I have three poems on our September and February quakes in the first part of The Happiness of Rain. As well, I’ve included a found poem on the telephone book which was written a few years earlier and published in JAAM in 2007.
Others whom I read and reread are John Clare, Hardy, the later Yeats, Edward Thomas, Charles Causley, Kathleen Jamie, Michael Longley, many contemporary Irish poets – the list never ends. Poets in New Zealand who spring to mind are Fiona Farrell, Michael Harlow, Cilla McQueen, Bill Manhire, Jim Norcliffe, Gregory O’Brien, C.K. Stead and Brian Turner.
The Happiness of Rain can be ordered from book shops or from Steele Roberts’ web site: www.SteeleRoberts.co.nz
Tuesday Poem: The Happiness Of Rain, by Jan Hutchison
This lanky child runs along the shore
cooling her feet in tidal pools.
Wherever she treads in spring
grasses are more tender.
On sultry days, she rides a pony
inland
then with quick hand-slaps
divides its mane in two.
Sometimes she perches in forest
trees among pellucid ferns.
Their fronds are shining whorls
she tunes with her little finger
to any wayward wind.
Far down, the stream shimmers,
and the child sings a promise
to the weeks to come.
water water
stars are winter’s flowers.
Credit Note: “The Happiness of Rain” is the title poem of Jan Hutchison’s new collection, published by Steele Roberts. Watch out for my interview with Jan, which I’ll be publishing here later this week.
The Tuesday Poem: You can check out the other Tuesday Poems for this week on the Tuesday Poem blog:- the hub poem at the centre of the page, and all the other poems to the left.
Tuesday Poem: Touchdown, and some Cool News
Touchdown
The engine ceased and silence fell.
We had made it. Nine months,
nine months in a metal womb
drinking recycled urine
eating recycled crap
watching our dosimeters glow.
I earned my place as captain. Sure,
there was the PR angle: Venus flies to Mars!
Great for the ratings, all that sort of thing.
But a dream born in girlhood
honed through years of preparation
had fitted me to take command.
“We’re down,” I said, “we’re clear and down.”
Fifteen minutes later
they would be cheering the news in Houston
but for now we had the planet to ourselves.
I looked at my companions. Dazed, exhausted,
but a spring of joy flowed in every one.
A human was about to step on Mars. The moment
I had dreamt about had come. I crawled into the airlock.
I waited till it cycled. I stepped outside
and felt the Martian sun.
The cold air chilled me. The red light was eerie.
The great deed of my life was done.
Credit note: “Touchdown” was first published in my second poetry collection, All Blacks’ Kitchen Gardens (HeadworX, 2007 – contact me if you’d like a copy), and republished in Voyagers: Science Fiction Poetry from New Zealand, ed Mark Pirie and Tim Jones (2009). In All Blacks’ Kitchen Gardens, it forms part of the “Red Stone” sequence about the colonisation of Mars.
The Cool News: I’ve just heard from IP, the publishers of Voyagers, that the Frankfurt Book Fair has requested Voyagers for its upcoming Books on New Zealand exhibition at the Fair. After all the hoops that other authors have had to jump through to get their books on display at the Fair, I feel just the tiniest smidgeon of guilt about this – but mainly, I feel very pleased!
A little bird tells me that, since the Voyagers concept worked so well in New Zealand, it might be repeated in a neighbouring country … watch this space!
The Tuesday Poem: You can check out the other Tuesday Poems for this week on the Tuesday Poem blog:- the hub poem at the centre of the page, and all the other poems to the left.
Poetry Readings Coming Up In Palmerston North, Takaka And Nelson
Just before I get onto the news of forthcoming readings, I have had another book review published in Landfall Review Online:
Tim Jones reviews Hilary and David by Laura Solomon.
(I have a lot of trouble with links to Landfall Review Online, so if this link does not work, look for the review entitled “Friends on Facebook”.)
Forthcoming Poetry Readings
August: Palmerston North
Keith Westwater and I read at the Ballroom Cafe in Wellington in June – our first joint reading since last year’s book launch tour for Men Briefly Explained and Tongues of Ash – and next month we’re heading to Palmerston North to read: Here are the details:
When: Wednesday 15 August, 6:00pm
Where: Palmerston North Central Library, Palmerston North
Here’s the writeup from the Eventfinder site:
Wellington poets Tim Jones and Keith Westwater read from their new collections.
Keith Westwater’s new book ‘Tongues of Ash’ won Interactive Publishing’s Best First Book Award. “There is a no-nonsense specificity about Keith’s poems, a refusal to privilege the smooth over the roughnesses of human experience….the book begins with an annotated map of Wellington as a special insert – which has room for romantic and family love, weather, landscapes, rocks and history.” – Jack Ross, poet and academic
Tim Jones’s new book ‘Men Briefly Explained’ was described by writer Mary McCallum as: “Tim Jones’ new collection holds men up to the light with poems that are intimate and playful, smart and satirical. He focuses on the rituals and carapaces of men and the relevance of that gender in the future. Men Briefly Explained is an engaging and provocative read.”
I’ve read once before in Palmerston North, and enjoyed it very much – I’m looking forward to reading there again.
September: Takaka and Nelson
It’s been many years since I have been to Nelson, and I have never been to Golden Bay, but I am planning to remedy both oversights in September. Though details are still to be confirmed, this is how things look at the moment:
Thurs 20 Sept, 7.30pm: Bay Lit Awards presentation ceremony, The Mussel Inn
Fri 21 Sept, 1pm: Reading at Takaka Memorial Library
Mon 24 Sept, 6 for 6.30pm: Reading at Nelson Live Poets, The Free House, 95 Collingwood Street
Watch this space for further details, Facebook and other events, etc. If you live in Palmerston North or the Top of the South, I hope we’ll get the chance to meet at one of these events.
IP Inside Track Consultations: Coming to NZ in August-September
News from Dr David Reiter of IP that he will be available for Inside Track Consultations for New Zealand authors during IP’s next book tour of New Zealand from 27 August to 6 September. Here are the details:
Dr David Reiter, Publisher, IP (Interactive Publications) will be offering Inside Track Consultations (ITCs) to aspiring authors interested in publishing with IP. Regarded as Australia’s most innovative independent publisher, IP has an expanding list of New Zealand authors, and publishes titles for adults and children in most genres in physical and digital editions. Your ITC can be for 30 minutes ($70) or an hour ($130), and he encourages you to send a sample of your work, plus a synopsis, in advance of the meeting. ITCs will be scheduled in concert with his tour of New Zealand from 27 Aug – 6 Sept, which will include stops in Dunedin, Christchurch, Wellington, Auckland and Tauranga, to promote new work by Karen Zelas and Sugu Pillay, as well as his own. For further info, please send an Expression of Interest to him ASAP at reiter@ipoz.biz
Tuesday Poem: Hub Cap’n
I’m the editor for the hub Tuesday Poem this week – check out what I’ve chosen as this week’s Tuesday Poem on the Tuesday Poem blog, and remember to check out all the other Tuesday Poems in the sidebar on the left, too.