The Daily Telegraph - Saturday - Review

The biggest prize in poetry goes to…

What’s hot on this year’s TS Eliot Prize shortlist

- By Tristram FANE SAUNDERS

Each year, the TS Eliot Prize offers poets a chance to win a huge sack of cash, and critics a chance to generalise about trends in poetry. So here goes: long fragmentar­y narratives are in, love poems are out (though Natalie Diaz unfashiona­bly flies the flag for sensual abandon). Who’ll win the £25,000 prize? If I were judging, it’d be Sasha Dugdale or Shane McCrae (see interview, p10). But I’m not, so I’d bet on Diaz, with a side-flutter on Bhanu Kapil. I’m sore about the omission of Timothy Donnelly’s superb The Problem of the Many, and wouldn’t have minded a bit of light relief (Caroline Bird, say, or Matthew Welton) but otherwise this is a strong and unusually ambitious list. Like last year, and the year before, and the year before that, half the nominees are university dons, but this year the books feel donnish. Chilly, prickly, with a bracing air of Eliotic intellectu­al rigour (especially Life Without Air), they’re all worth reading, even if – especially if – they turn out not to be your cup of tea.

POSTCOLONI­AL LOVE POEM by Natalie Diaz (Faber, £10.99)

In hard-hitting political poems and lush songs of queer lust alike, Diaz draws inspiratio­n from the desertand-river landscapes of her birthplace, Fort Mojave Indian Village, Colorado. The best are very moving, though metaphors such as

“Your hips are quartz-light and dangerous,/ two rose-horned rams ascending a soft desert wash/ before the November sky untethers a hundred-year flood” may strike some readers as a bit overwrough­t.

DEFORMATIO­NS by Sasha Dugdale (Carcanet, £11.99) A collection dominated by two big set pieces, both gripping: a PTSDwarped, modernish reimaginin­g of the Odyssey, and a queasily ambiguous sequence in shifting voices about artist and child-abuser Eric Gill. Unpuzzling the latter requires a lot of legwork from the reader, but rewards it. Dugdale is the real thing.

SHINE, DARLING by Ella Frears (Offord Road, £10) The Prufrock and Other Observatio­ns problem: if your debut contains a show-stopper, it makes the “other observatio­ns” look flimsy. “Passivity, Electricit­y, Acclivity”, a guilt-haunted lyric essay about (among other things) the poet’s near-abduction, is one of the best long poems of recent years, yet sits oddly amid fun but slighter poems, many written to fulfil writer-inresidenc­e briefs. Themes include sex, Cornwall, and sex in Cornwall.

RENDANG by Will Harris (Granta, £10.99) Harris reflects on stray conversati­ons, and his Indonesian heritage, leaving space for us to draw our own conclusion­s in a debut too subtle to do justice to in a couple of sentences. I found it easier to admire than love, but admired it greatly.

LOVE MINUS LOVE by Wayne Holloway-Smith (Bloodaxe, £10.99)

With a tyrannical father, a harddrinki­ng mother and an eating disorder, you’ll be miserable anyway so you might as well go vegan. That’s the subtext of this hip yet heartfelt second collection, billed as one long poem (really a lot of short, untitled ones). The unpunctuat­ed coming-of-age/coming-out angst recalls prize judge Andrew McMillan, but with laughs. Read it for two very fine poems about a falling baby and the world’s tallest cow.

HOW TO WASH A HEART by Bhanu Kapil (Liverpool University Press, £9.99)

Spindly, untitled poems tell a fierce yet wry parable of an immigrant welcomed as a “guest” by a mother, who then resents this newcomer’s growing bond with her daughter. Sharp and disquietin­g, Kapil’s is a wholly original voice.

LIFE WITHOUT AIR by Daisy Lafarge (Granta, £10.99) Beneath the surface of labcoat-y modernism and Latinate diction, these stand-offish, surreal poems have intriguing things to say about sexism and kinds of repressive relationsh­ip (marital, maternal). The most direct, personal and unbuttoned poem is an eight-page address to the philosophe­r Zeno.

HOW THE HELL ARE YOU by Glyn Maxwell (Picador, £10.99)

I love Maxwell, but I do wish he’d stop wanging on about The Blank Page. He’s said all he has to say about having said all he has to say. Still, he has a lovely ear for rhyme. Includes what was perhaps the first Covid poem to hit bookshops.

SOMETIMES I

NEVER SUFFERED by Shane McCrae (Corsair, £10.99) The soul of Jim Limber, a Civil Warera African-American, guides us through Heaven in vividly voiced sonnets, and in a short verse drama encounters his adoptive dad, Confederat­e president Jefferson Davies, who’s in Hell. A few thousand years earlier, “The Hastily Assembled Angel… built to monitor earth” is sent here without proper training, so just sits on a metal folding chair and watches the Flood (in artfully stuttering iambic pentameter). Bizarre and brilliant.

These books feel donnish, with a bracing air of Eliotic intellectu­al rigour

THE MARTIAN’S REGRESS by J O Morgan (Jonathan Cape, £10) A Martian’s on a mission to study a ruined planet (this one) abandoned by his pollution-happy ancestors (us), sentient sex-doll in tow. In the eerie myths and songs about Mars’s grim society that serve as interludes to this story, Morgan makes ugly things beautiful.

All 10 poets will read at the T S Eliot Prize ceremony, 7pm tomorrow. For tickets, visit southbankc­entre.co.uk

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