What a fabulous idea this series is! Taster selections of contemporary poets in affordable volumes. Here we have three female poets from different cultural backgrounds writing about what connects us to our bodies and to other people (mothers, lovers, husbands, children), and, shockingly, how bodies are abused and horror embodied (female genital mutilation, rape, exile and displacement).
Of the three poets here, Olds is probably the best known and most conventional. Booker captures the rhythms of her African/Caribbean heritage and writes of the strength that comes from pain, grief and something near hate, though not without a sly, wry humour: 'I cutting it off if you lose your mind. / Don't think it. And if you do, don't sleep'.
Somalian-British Shire is the rawest and, perhaps, most exciting: she's at her best in the prose-poetry of exile ('no-one leaves home unless home is the mouth of a shark'), or prejudice ('I hear them say "go home", I hear them say "fucking immigrants"...All I can say is, I was once like you... and now my home is the mouth of a shark, now my home is the barrel of a gun. I'll see you on the other side') or the stark, shocking 'To my daughters I will say / when the men come / set yourself on fire'.
If you're interested in what contemporary poetry can be and do, this is a fine taster.
Review from an ARC via Amazon Vine