Weekend Herald

Poetry

- Reviewedby SiobhanHar­vey & DavidHill

THE YIELD

by Sue Wootton ( Otago University Press, $ 25)

Dunedin poet Sue Wootton’s fifth collection is a richly mulled book about suffering and empowermen­t. Everywhere adversity lingers, whether in elegies to the trials of the outdoors such as in Wild or the spiritual challenges found over a latte in Priest in a Coffee Shop. Meaty poems about the ordeals of womanhood and shorter pieces about dangerous instinct are equally striking. Wootton’s message is staunch: that technology and consumeris­m are limited sedatives because, in city and country, we remain tested by self- doubt and our surroundin­gs. SH

THE INTERNET OF THINGS

by Kate Camp ( Victoria University Press, $ 25) Multi- award- winning poet Kate Camp’s wordrich, haunting collection transports us through three stages: surprise, loss then hope. The sharpest poems begin with imaginativ­e titles before journeying readers through philosophi­cal examinatio­ns of what it means to be human, confirming their truths in the succinctne­ss of a few verses. The resulting complex interplay of rhythm, revelation and ethics is superb. SH

NIGHT BURNS WITH A WHITE FIRE — THE ESSENTIAL LAURIS EDMOND

ed. by Frances Edmond & Sue Fitchett ( Steele Roberts, $ 35)

Among poems from Edmond’s 17 collection­s, readers will find stunning earlier poems such as Tempo and The Ghost Moth, companione­d by shorter, sharper mid- career pieces such as Going to Moscow. Late- career poems such as Before a Funeral and 3 a. m. appear before epilogue Late Song . Throughout, we’re reminded of how attainable and profound Edmond’s work is. Indispensa­ble. SH

ALLEN CURNOW: COLLECTED POEMS

ed. by Elizabeth Caffin & Terry Sturm ( Auckland University Press, $ 60)

ALLEN CURNOW: SIMPLY BY SAILING IN A NEW DIRECTION — A BIOGRAPHY

by Terry Sturm and ed. by Linda Cassells ( AUP, $ 70) These are lush, weighty books. The Collected Poems gathers works from across the author’s life, including the early, formal Valley of Decision and Curnow’s first nods towards freer forms, New Zealand City. There are also the playful and indispensa­ble, such as Early Days Yet. At 600 pages, author Terry Sturm and editor Linda Cassells are to be commended for their thoroughne­ss, insight and refreshing depiction of their subject as brilliant and blemished in the biography Simply by Sailing in a New Direction. SH

NIGHT HORSE

by Elizabeth Smither ( AUP, $ 25) In her 18th collection, Smither continues to turn the everyday into epiphanies. Hot water bottles become an emblem of fortitude. Days swimming with “our handsome fathers” encapsulat­e friendship. The “little butter curls . . . camel’s last straw” of hay bales form a multi- level landscape. Smither shows her precision with words and her daring with imagery. ( Ironing brings a room “full of arms and necks”; a dying small girl plays the ukelele with her teacher in a small scene of huge potency.) Smither knows exactly what not to say. Her works satisfy with their stepping stones and the spaces between. DH

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