Showing posts with label Reviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reviews. Show all posts

Friday, December 22, 2023

I Do Everything I’m Told, by Megan Fernandes / Reviuw


 

I Do Everything I’m Told, by Megan Fernandes

Megan Fernandes’s third collection of poems, I Do Everything I’m Told, injects new life into the love poem. The book skates thrillingly between desire and race and sexuality, her writing smart without ever lecturing. “Letter to a Young Poet,” for instance, feels like taking a meandering walk with one of your most brilliant and curious friends. “To want the same things as you age is not always a failure of growth,” Fernandes writes, delivering a clear stab of wisdom, before dropping into a pair of arresting claims: “A good city will not parent you. Every poet has a love affair with a bridge.” But the collection is at its most confident and vulnerable when Fernandes writes about heartache and desire. In “Drive,” the speaker grasps through the aftermath of a breakup and the cliches it inspires but eventually stumbles upon a profound sense of acceptance: “Contradictions are a sign we are from god. We fall. We don’t always get to ask why.” Fernandes’s poems are aching and sly. They capture everything beautiful and insufferable and enormous about falling in love. —Isle McElroy

VULTURE



Friday, November 3, 2023

The best recent poetry / Review roundup

 

Ishion HutchinsonVisions of war … Ishion Hutchinson. Photograph: Eamonn McCabe
School of Instructions Ishion Hutchinson


Review

The best recent poetry – review roundup

School of Instructions by Ishion Hutchinson; The Wrong Person to Ask by Marjorie Lotfi; Housebreak by Shareen K Murayama; Cowboy by Kandace Siobhan Walker; Incubation: A Space for Monsters by Bhanu Kapil

Rebecca Tamás
Friday 3 November 2023

School of Instructions by Ishion Hutchinson (Faber£12.99)

This visionary work of memory, elegy and loss captures the experiences of West Indian soldiers who fought for the British in the first world war. The collection weaves together the terrors of war with the terrors of imperialism, using dizzyingly original language and brutally impactful rhythms to create a tapestry of suffering, courage and struggle: “Frostbitten mud. Shellshock mud. Dungheap mud. Imperial mud … Caliban mud. Cannibal mud.” These experiences filter into the book’s second narrative, the life of Godspeed, a schoolboy living in Jamaica in the 1990s. Hutchinson subtly outlines the ways in which colonial force was perpetuated by language, English culture thrust into young minds with its own kind of violence: “Godspeed skulled elocution day … and so missed the shrieking out of ‘And then my heart with pleasure fills, / And dances with the daffodils.’ Bayonet fighting amid the cactus hedges …” The collection sings of those who “have no memorial who are perished as though they had never been” – reanimating their lives within the deathless, vivid fabric of poetry.

The Wrong Person to Ask by Marjorie Lotfi

The Wrong Person to Ask by Marjorie Lotfi (Bloodaxe£10.99)

Lotfi’s imagistically rich debut collection moves from her childhood in Iran, where her family were uprooted by the revolution, to her youth in America and her current home in Scotland. Lotfi is sensitively attuned to the painful dislocation of self that can come from moving between different nations – “In my dream she asks me to say it again, / Lotfi, spell it out, before turning me away … I push through the exit / and walk home in rain to a house / that isn’t mine, in a country that isn’t mine.” Again and again her radiant language turns over the loss of family intimacy and identity caused by political upheaval and violence: “Ask about Ameh, her arms around my skinny frame, / or how I can have forgotten Farsi and the sound / of her voice bidding me each night to let the day go.” Lotfi’s book mourns these losses and separations, while at the same time rendering the possibilities of a capacious, multifaceted sense of belonging: “And what is home if not the choice – / over and over again – to stay?”

Housebreak Shareen K Murayama Bad Betty,

Housebreak by Shareen K Murayama (Bad Betty£10)
A book of many griefs, personal and intimate as well as political and societal. The poet’s loss of her mother, first to dementia and then to death, is explored with arresting dark humour and piercing clarity: “I tell myself I’m not going to write another dead mom poem. / Nevertheless she arrives, promptly. In a care home fisted with careless bags of food or a spam musubi. / A comfort offering in reverse.” The book also addresses the trauma caused by hate crimes against Asian-Americans during the pandemic: “How you failed at making yourself smaller / in the pocket of your seat on your way to work this morning … nasty people should stay in fucking Asia.” Yet in the face of pain and prejudice, it remains fierce and bristling with life: “I have faith in folktales, like my grandmother’s story. / Anyone could be saved or eaten. Their tongues cut out.”

Cowboy by Kandace Siobhan Walker (Cheerio£11)
This debut is hilarious, moving and dazzlingly new. Running through topics as varied as love, gentrification, neurodivergence, gender, queerness, death, life in the internet age, low wage jobs and capitalist exploitation, these poems create a gloriously sharp picture of modern millennial life and struggle: “Communism was cool again, Instagram was attractive. / Students were in occupation. Sad boys were novelties, / sad girls aspirational.” Walker’s greatest strengths are her beautifully odd imagery (“Nighttime’s religious core is wherever you / touch me; I’m absolutely dolphins. I’m molten”) and the mordant, painfully dark humour of her poetic voice. “What a beautiful day to have a miscarriage! … / There’s the beginning of you. I bleed / through my pyjamas – there’s the end.” Cowboy marks the entry of a significant and exciting new voice into British poetry.

Incubation: A Space for Monsters by Bhanu Kapil

Incubation: A Space for Monsters by Bhanu Kapil (Prototype£12)
This hybrid work of poetry and prose from the TS Eliot prize winning author is as fresh, dangerous and thrilling as the open road followed by protagonist Laloo, a cyborg traveller who is both girl and mother, immigrant and settler. Laloo hitchhikes through the bewitching yet hostile American landscape, reflecting on her own complicated pasts in England and India, and her fractured relationship with herself. She is searching for the transformation or escape that journeying might provide: “I didn’t want to go home … A beautiful hazard: to go and keep going.” In these capacious and innovative poems of global shift and radical monstrosity, it is the brilliant potency of Kapil’s images that holds the threads of the narrative together: “At the highway exit, the hitchhiker is all bones and a red T-shirt in the ruby red tail lights … Cars whizzing by in a frenzy of rubies and diamonds.”

THE GUARDIAN




Friday, July 28, 2023

Letters to Monica by Philip Larkin / Reviews

 


They were ‘soulmates’ according to people who knew both of them.

They were ‘soulmates’ according to people who knew both of them. The word has a double-edged quality; it may suggest that they got on well together because they presented such a problem to everyone else. Both Philip Larkin and Monica Jones found it difficult to suffer fools gladly, and in this collection of letters (ranging from 1946-84) from Larkin to his long-term companion and lover, the mean-spirited and misanthropic are given full rein.


Larkin met Jones in 1946, and they soon became lovers. (So much for sexual intercourse beginning in 1963). She was a flamboyant presence in the English Department of Leicester University, remaining a junior lecturer until her retirement in 1981. He went from university library to university library, ending up at Hull. They holidayed with one another; she put up with his occasional other mistresses; but only late in life did they move in together. Monica destroyed Philip’s diaries after his death in 1985, and went on living, somewhat chaotically, in his house in Hull until her own death in 2001. Most of these letters surfaced, in a terrible condition, long after Andrew Motion’s fine biography and Anthony Thwaite’s edition of the poet’s other letters.


Monica was the poet’s sounding-board about all sorts of matters. The first letters here show a familiar, guarded restraint —‘Oh dear! I do seem to have created a bad impression lately’ — but before much longer he is talking to her about anything and everything on his mind. Some letters are the sort of frank outpourings of rage (memorably about his neighbours’ taste in music) which no doubt the incinerated diaries were filled with. They were so much alike that Larkin once said to her that ‘what we have is a kind of homosexual relation, disguised.’


Unexpectedly, he does not give way much to the sorts of illiberal sentiments we know from other sources that he and Monica enjoyed sharing. The nearest to that is a line from a 1951 letter, thanking Monica for reminding him of Empire Day: ‘Queen’s [Belfast] flew a flag and I was nice to a nigger.’ In other respects, there was almost nothing he would not share with Monica.


The positive side of this is that Monica, quite clearly, is the person he talks to about literary matters, and the technique of writing. The comments on literature, both in individual cases and in general, are fascinating and insightful — for instance, his critic- ism of The Heart of the Matter for going against the fundamental nature of the novel:


The novel to me is the artform in which we show what happens in human life. ‘Miracles’ do not happen.

Often in these letters we see the first twinges of what would emerge much later as a poetic statement:


Of course, if one starts blaming one’s parents, well, one would never stop! Samuel Butler said that anyone who was still worrying about his parents at 35 was a fool, but he certainly didn’t forget them himself, and I think the influence they exert is enormous.


Twenty years later, more sharply, that would emerge as ‘This Be The Verse.’ Most acute is an utterly disillusioned consideration of the last line of ‘An Arundel Tomb’ — ‘what will survive of us is love’:


One might say ‘penicillin is stronger than death’, sometimes with fair truth, but ‘love is stronger than death’ reminds me of that slogan ‘Britain (or London) can take it’, which irritated me in the same way. It surely meant that people can stand being bombed as long as they aren’t bombed.


Larkin, on the whole, was not filled with the milk of human kindness, and Monica was not a correspondent for whom he needed to extend himself into charm, or even write about anything very obviously interesting. Anthony Thwaite has cut down a lot of letters, he says, concerning Larkin ‘changing his sheets, washing his sheets, washing his socks, mending his socks,’ and what had just happened in The Archers.

The result —though of course of great interest to Larkin scholars — is a definitely lowering book. It is amusing to try to find the least interesting subject Larkin thought worth setting down in a letter to Monica. For my money, the prize goes to a 1959 letter, which begins:


I have four rolls of pink toilet paper on my low table, more or less at my elbow, but their only significance is that I’ve been too lazy to put them away. Pink is a new departure for me — only just discovered Bronco (why Bronco? Talking Bronco) makes it.


This defiant drabness extends even to Larkin’s accounts of their erotic life:

You were looking out of my kitchen window, and let me tuck your skirt up round your waist to be admired. You were wearing the black nylon panties with the small hole in!


One rather admires a writer who finds such pleasure in such utterly grim vignettes, one devoted to the dogged transcript of the stuff of daily life — Barbara Pym comes to mind. Larkin’s interest in the small-scale and bathetic, which often possesses such warmth in the poetry, in his letters comes across as small-mindedness. A certain comic theme emerges with his recurrent complaints about his Christmas presents. In 1952 he writes:


Not much of a haul this Christmas! A laundry bag (asked for), a 10/6 book token, a second-hand tie, & a pair of expanding cufflinks enamelled in blue with large ‘P’s in cursive script on them. That’s all, that’s all, that’s all.

Their presents to us were miserable, average cost 10/3d. Mine were opulent, average cost 27/-.


Larkin, I think, is at his least likeable in his letters about Kingsley Amis. From this volume alone you might question whether they were friends at all. He complains about the chaos of the Amis house when he stays — not that surprising, with three small children at the time. He insists repeatedly, and implausibly, that the best jokes and scenes in Lucky Jim and That Uncertain Feeling were stolen from him — as if Larkin could ever have written a novel like Lucky Jim. And, recurrently, he gives way to an unworthy belief that Hilly, Amis’s wife, would have been much better off with almost anyone else. Ludicrously,

Hilly must regret marrying Kingsley so early when she sees her sister married to a respectable husband who will (very likely) go far. 

In a one-sided correspondence like this, there might be a risk that the unquoted correspondent emerges faintly. Not here. Monica’s personality is dauntingly clear in Larkin’s letters to her. Just how difficult she could be emerges strongly — a couple of quotations fromher letters to Larkin leaves no doubt of the venomous accuracy of Amis’s portrait of ‘Margaret’ in Lucky Jim. In other places, the full Lucky Jim horror of Monica’s histrionic behaviour emerges through things Larkin was obliged to say to her:


I really don’t see where the agony comes in, if you mean people would take [the poem ‘If My Darling’] as applying to you.


I’d even go so far as to make three rules: One, never say more than two sentences, or very rarely three, without waiting for an answer or comment from whoever you’re talking to. Two, abandon altogether your harsh didactic voice, & use only the soft musical one (except in special cases); & Three, don’t do more than glance at your interlocutor (wrong word?) once or twice when speaking. You’re getting a habit of boring your face up or round into the features of your listener — don’t do it! It’s most trying.


Who, reading this testimony from someone who undoubtedly loved her, can do anything but give thanks that they never dined with Monica Jones? The odd thing, which people have been wondering about ever since the Letters and Motio n’s Life were published, is that a poet so generous and warm in his published work could be so curmudgeonly in everyday life. I don’t suppose he was very good for Monica, and she was probably not all that good for him. Soulmates, indeed.


WRITTEN BY
PHILIP HENSHER

Philip Hensher is professor of Creative Writing at Bath Spa University and the author of 11 novels including A Small Revolution in Germany.


Wednesday, July 19, 2023

A New Life of Philip Larkin / Review

 

Philip Larkin



Review: A New Life of Philip Larkin

Aaron MacLean

November 21, 2014

After taking a bad fall in his downstairs bathroom, the poet Philip Larkin was rushed to the hospital on the night of 29 November 1985. Having actively contemplated death for most of his 63 years, he now felt—accurately—that his moment of expiration was approaching. In the ambulance, he begged his longtime companion Monica Jones, who rode to the hospital with him, to destroy his diaries.After Larkin’s death a few days later, Monica complied, turning the diaries over to his secretary—who happened to be another 'longtime companion' of Larkin's, Betty Mackereth. Mackereth spent an entire afternoon shredding and incinerating their contents.

But Larkin had said nothing about the letters in his possession, nor—of course—was there anything he could have done about the vast amount of correspondence he had mailed to others over the years. Decades earlier, in a poem he had composed on the occasion of his 31st birthday, Larkin had written:

Ends in themselves, my letters plot no change;
They carry nothing dutiable; they won’t
Aspire, astound, establish or estrange.

How wrong he was. When Andrew Motion’s biography of Larkin was published in the early nineties, readers were astounded—even scandalized—by revelations drawn from Larkin’s correspondence, which included a dizzying number of romantic connections, and quite a few of them conducted simultaneously, for a man with such a fusty public image. There was less evidence of much actual sex having occurred, but the letters between Larkin and his circle of literary friends more than made up for that with a generous dose of explicit talk that showed a certain lack of interest in what most would consider conventional behavior.

Consider this passage from a 1949 letter to Larkin from his friend Kingsley Amis, discussing the availability of Amis’ wife for some amateur photography:

I have asked Hilly about your dirty-picture proposal, and obtained a modified assent. She is prepared to do corset-and-black-stocking or holding-up-a-towel stuff, and bare-bosom stuff…but is a bit hesitant about being quite undraped, "though I’ll probably get bolder when I start." Does this give you the hron? It does me, slightly, oddly. Do you want "some of us together"? ("Why you narcissistic—").

The next year, Hilly herself wrote to Larkin while frustrated with her husband’s serial infidelities, musing that, "I’ve got a weekend off in April when I shall be going to London, I dream that I’m meeting you there, & that we’ll have loads to drink & then go to bed together, but alas, only a dream." And Larkin’s correspondence with the Amis’s almost pales in comparison to his letters with the writer Robert Conquest.

In his biography, Motion seemed to enjoy leveraging the angle of scandal for most of what it was worth. To some extent, a hard hit on Larkin was unavoidable, considering the available evidence. What can be said positively, or even neutrally, about a man who, in the aftermath of his married girlfriend’s miscarriage in 1952—the child was likely his—wrote in a letter that, "I fancy you should be thankful…you would have got pretty tired of ‘a lifetime of deceit’, which really is what it would’ve turned out to be." The letter is illustrated by two drawings from Larkin, the first of an adult seal smiling at a baby seal, and the second of the grown-up seal waving good-bye to the baby.

Some things are just not right.

Motion’s approach—as critical reviews noted at the time—lacked balance. For one thing, Motion oddly missed much of Larkin’s irony and humor, much of it self-deprecating, and seemed to assume that the gathering bitterness of Larkin's later years had been the norm throughout his life, despite abundant evidence of altogether healthy relations he maintained with both colleagues and loved ones. (His most frequent correspondent was his widowed mother, to whom he sent more than 4,000 dispatches.)

James Booth’s new biography, Philip Larkin: Life, Art, and Love, sets out explicitly as a corrective. Booth—at one time an English professor at Larkin’s university, Hull, as was Motion, briefly—is the literary adviser to the Philip Larkin Society, and so we readers must settle for a compromise: We know that there is going to be a fannish element to the approach, but can also expect mastery of the material. There appears to be much mastery and also a self-conscious effort on the part of the author to moderate his natural apologetic impulse. The resulting volume is engaging: mostly judicious, light on faults, and heavy on fair, even illuminating, observations.

Booth’s surest terrain is his sense for Larkin’s humor and its role in his complex rhetorical strategies, which differed with every correspondent. Speaking of an interview Larkin gave to the press in his final years, Booth points out that, "Sincerity and irony are blended in an inscrutable mix," but this is an observation that could have applied to virtually everything he wrote, in his poems, his letters, and, for that matter, the letters his literary friends wrote to him. As those familiar with a certain sort of witheringly dry English humor know, there is absolutely no way to be sure just how serious Amis is when, for example, he speaks of the plans to involve his wife in taking dirty pictures for Larkin.

This ambiguity extends to the poetry. It is often a challenge to determine just how serious Larkin is there, or even if he always knew just where he had left the line drawn between sincerity and irony. This applies not only to obviously semi-humorous efforts like 'This Be The Verse,' but also to more ostensibly grand affairs like 'An Arundel Tomb', where the narrator stands before the grave of a medieval wedded pair who are depicted—in an intimate detail wrought by the 14th century sculptor—holding hands. The final stanza concludes with a typically Larkinian crescendo:

Time has transfigured them into
Untruth. The stone fidelity
They hardly meant has come to be
Their final blazon, and to prove
Our almost-instinct almost true:
What will survive of us is love.

Incautious readers have long finished the poem feeling buoyed by that last line, having missed the import of the two almosts that precede it.

Keeping track of his irony must have been only marginally more difficult for Larkin than keeping track of his women. Monica Jones, a brilliant but difficult academic, was the longest serving companion of Larkin’s maturity, and the only one who was his intellectual peer. She was never granted her desire that she and Larkin marry, and had to share him with others—though it seems that he was principally an emotional Lothario rather than a physical one. Monica’s main competition was initially Maeve Brennan, a woman of serious Catholic principles (hence the limited physical dimension to the affair) who worked for Larkin at Hull, where he was the university librarian. Later, both Maeve and Monica had to share time with Betty Mackereth, the secretary who destroyed Larkin’s diaries at Monica’s request.

Booth navigates these unstill waters with care, defending Larkin from the more unbalanced and hypocritical censures of his critics, while presenting the affairs as the record seems to show they were: dishonest and often dishonorable, but also decades-long sources of frequent warmth and purpose to their participants. At times Booth lapses, attempting even to defend Larkin from the poet's own self-criticism when he wrote in a letter of his simultaneous involvement with Monica and Maeve, that

There isn’t any need to make my situation any better-sounding than it is: a self-centered person conducting an affair containing almost no responsibilities with one girl getting mixed up with another, heedless of the feelings of either. Well, not heedless, but not heedful enough to do anything about it, anyway.

This seems about right. Of the poetry, Booth provides thought-provoking and sometimes persuasive readings anchored almost always to the biographical circumstances surrounding the composition of a poem. With Larkin, who asserted that he wrote "poems to preserve things I have seen/thought/felt…both for myself and for others, though I feel that my prime responsibility is to the experience itself," this approach seems particularly appropriate.

When Booth goes wrong it is, usually, at moments of ill-restrained enthusiasm, and there is an unfortunate (though useful, in a sense) tendency towards relying at such moments on unpardonable clichés: noting that the poem 'Days' is a "timeless masterpiece," or that another effort involved Larkin having "pulled out all the organ stops" (at least that "organ" is in there) or otherwise having "cast discretion to the winds," so as better to "let rip," perhaps while "spoiling for a fight." And I will be happy never to encounter the word "Lawrentian" in print again.

But the pleasures of the book are many. One is being reminded of less prominent Larkin poems unpublished in his lifetime and less-frequently mentioned than show-stoppers like 'An Arundel Tomb.' Consider the brief, untitled elegy he wrote shortly after the death of his father in 1948:

An April Sunday brings the snow,
Making the blossom on the plum trees green,
Not white. An hour or two, and it will go.
Strange that I spend that hour moving between 

Cupboard and cupboard, shifting the store
Of jam you made of fruit from these same trees:
Five loads—a hundred pounds or more—
More than enough for all next summer’s teas, 

Which now you will not sit and eat.
Behind the glass, under the cellophane,
Remains your final summer—sweet
And meaningless, and not to come again.

For a work that he considered either too weak—or too personal—to publish, there is so much that is typically Larkin here, from its plainspokenness to the suburban "cellophane," the fascination with death and the threat of nihilism. There is also its gentle Englishness, and it is hard to read it without thinking of the wild poem written by the Welshman Dylan Thomas—whom Larkin admired—at the prospect of his own father’s death, 'Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night,' only three years later.

Larkin never married or had a child, and his horror of such possibilities, along with his fascination for those who took such a path, infused much of his poetry. When he died, Monica took charge, and had him buried with a simple headstone identifying him simply as a ‘Writer.’ Booth describes how the complicated ironies of Larkin’s life extended even into the cemetery. When Monica died in 2001, she had herself buried in a plot near Larkin’s. Maeve followed in 2003, and was interred with the man she took up with after Larkin only a few graves away from both Monica and the poet. (At the funeral, Booth reports that Betty Mackereth had "commented wickedly: ‘Now nobody can contradict me.'")

Maeve—a sweeter, simpler woman than Monica, and one who did not catch every implication of Larkin’s work—had the last line of 'An Arundel Tomb' ("What will survive of us is love") inscribed on her own headstone. Booth notes that Maeve had always been earnest that ‘Philip really did mean' what he had written, insisting that there was no irony in the line. One can hear the ghostly less deceived snort across the grass from Monica’s grave…

One wonders if Larkin would have sighed or inwardly chuckled at this—or both.


FREEBACON