Napier Courier

‘It’s pure fascinatio­n’

Time to think about doing something exciting with your life

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The Dark Cracks of Kemang by Jeremy Roberts Reviewed by Michael Botur

In2013, poet Jeremy Roberts did something few of us have the guts to do: he looked at his Auckland life, decided he’d supported his musician daughter on enough gigs, and dared himself to squeeze in some adventure inthe third quarter ofhis life.

Age 53, Roberts agreed to spend a year teaching at NZ Internatio­nal School in Jakarta, a city of 10 million in anation of 271 million.

The move was pretty ballsy. Infact, The DarkCracks of Kemang, published September 2022 (10 years after his adventure began) is entirely a meditation about finding the beautiful exhilarati­on of daring oneself to live more adventurou­sly.

Why’d he do it, and why’d he write the memoir? Because Roberts is obsessed with rock ‘n roll – which, at the time Roberts moved to Indonesia, incoming president Joko Widodo was obsessed with, too.

Roberts is today settled in Napier, running Napier Live Poets, various page projects, and regularly interviewi­ng poets on Radio Hawke’s Bay. But to become a leader and stand upin the literary landscape required a ‘hero’s journey’ to Jakarta.

In the book, Roberts spends 2013-2016 teaching by day and performing expat poems at night upon un familiar stages inan unfamiliar culture, trusting a colourful Manchester socialist to be his on-stage companion, playing guitar while Roberts waxed poetry (it evidently turns the right heads, because Roberts meets a Javanese woman who becomes hiswife).

The name of the poetry duo Roberts created in Jakarta was The Bajaj Boys – named for the threewheel­ed tuk tuk taxis which thousands of expatriate internatio­nal teachers like Roberts relied up on to get around a city sohumid that Roberts’ leather jacket turned mouldy in the cupboard.

In the spirit of wild writers like Hunter S. Thompson, Jim Morrison, Patti Smith and Sam Hunt – all of whom get discussed inthe book— The Dark Cracks of Kemang effortless­ly flits between English and Bahasa, present tense and past tense, poetry and prose.

The book is also unafraid to lay bare all the ups and downs of the developing nation. Just a couple of pages in, we get a descriptio­n of the bum-washing hand-held bidet device knownas ‘semprotan air’; Indonesian quirks are explained to us on every second page, actually; andthe book gives us straight-up appraisals of Indonesian food, language, clothing, customs, corruption, religion, attitudes - aswell as taking an objective look at the attitudes of Roberts’ peer Western teachers, for better and worse (one teacher is preoccupie­d with the loss of her precious vibrators which Customs confiscate­d at the airport).

Each page is wide-eyed with fascinatio­n at the colourful archipelag­o. The book is also about the forces which brought himto The Bajaj Boys in the first place.

Roberts covers his student days at Auckland Uni, tropical storms, monkeys, bat shit vs rat shit, and a tonne of cultural discussion told without any pejorative Western condescens­ion.

It’s pure fascinatio­n – Roberts is as impressed or unimpresse­d with Jakarta as he is Auckland, Napier or California (where – at the sametime as Roberts is finding his inner rock star, his famous daughter Eden Iris is doing the samein Los Angeles).

Wanta book which takes you on a three-wheel motorised rikshaw tour through ahuge segment of the world’s population whom Kiwis hardly ever interact with? Andwould you like your book to discuss Ozzy, The Stooges, the Smiths, sweaty palms, c-dizzle, sex, death, and explain the Bahasa wordfor ‘boring’ all onpage 138?

Read The DarkCracks ofKemang and think about doing something excitingwi­th your life, even if you’re 53 like Roberts. Write about it in steamy, sensual poetry. Record it and publish it on Soundcloud and YouTube– just like Jeremy Roberts.

Want a book which takes you on a three-wheel motorised rikshaw tour through a huge segment of the world’s population whom Kiwis hardly ever interact with?

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