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‘Read this. Emote enthusiast­ically. Recover. Reread it. Recommend it’

Work by Frank Kuppner leads new poetry collection­s

- Reviews by Hayden Murphy

Carcanet, £12.99

The freedom to wonder, the liberty to imagine, a wish to be precise and the right to be contrary motivate all four writers under review.

It is a great pleasure to be embedded once again within the eclectic wordwomb of Glasgow-born (1951) Frank Kuppner. During the 1990s my Irish Times editor and I attempted to make him a cult figure in the suburbs of Dublin, or at least in Galway city. Maybe it worked. Who can tell? The fact that he is comparativ­ely sidelined in literary circles in Scotland I find baffling.

In this his 11th collection Kuppner presents 501 quatrains in five books. The titular Mandarin wanders and scrounges across an “alternativ­e Imperial China”.

Brevity is alien to him. He is both gregarious and expansive and yet evasive: “his views on the real world always were somewhat opaque”.

His is the clamour of conceits from a bar-room Confucius who has discovered that “the new sort of tree is not really a tree at all!/It is in fact, something more resembling a large carnivorou­s insect./Not a very cheery thing to learn when deep in the heart of a forest, is it?”.

This Mandarin, not related to the fictional vagabonds of de Beauvoir, even has a male “#MeToo” moment when: “unable to continue his work this morning/On The Fundamenta­l Maturity of Most Chinese Poetry/ Because his wife has just beaten him senseless with the heavy manuscript–/ Although, in fairness to her be it said, she did at least glance through it first”.

Then, of course, there are those speculativ­e visits to his ageing “Aunt, the retired Imperial Concubine, Swaying Blossom, /At her charming Hillside Retreat, near the Pearl Breath of Spring Lake”.

Will she be in, or even alive, when he visits again? No spoiler here. Read this book. Preferably aloud. Emote enthusiast­ically. Recover. Reread it. Recommend it.

DEAR PILGRIMS By John F Deane

Carcanet Press, £9.99

John F Deane was born on Achill Island (1943) off the west coast of Ireland: “I am child of the island, son of its earth, spirit/ of Atlantic waters”. After a period training for the priesthood he settled in Dublin.

With focused zeal he founded both Poetry Ireland and Dedalus Press, including among poets in translatio­n Nobel Laureate Tomas Transtrome­r. Since his retirement as editor in 2006 he has become an acclaimed and award-winning poet.

An iconoclast­ic disbelieve­r in fashion, a pilgrim soul, he probes the spiritual to articulate its foundation in doubt: “I will name things, he thought/ to hold them warm inside my life”.

Celebratio­n and compassion are central to his eighth collection with Carcanet. His daughter’s wedding evokes an epithalami­um: “I prayed that –/to the question that you would need to ask – the answers might always be/the loveliness and wonder//of creation”.

In the sustained Letter from East Anglia, dedicated to Dr Rowan Williams, he is on pilgrimage to a place where there “were words that made as one/the raw earth of our scrublands and the heaven of our hopes”.

Towards the end of Mosaic, a six-section poem, he states: “So have I lived/in bemused communion with the crinkled skin of language,/the grace of love, given and received”.

VENUS AS A BEAR By Vahni Capildeo

Carcanet Press, £9.99

In the wonderful imaginativ­e world of Vahini Capilido, who comes from Trinidad (born 1973), there are no borders: “I want you like I

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