I really enjoyed this poetry collection by Australian author Cate Kennedy. The 40 poems are a mix of memoir, slices of life, and social commentary with a conscience. Although her use of imagery and literary devices is excellent, the poems are also accessible. Many drew me in and I wanted to go back and read them again (which I did).
My personal favourite was 'Picasso's portrait of a young woman' in which a family run into an art gallery to get away from the rain. The girl is mesmerised by a painting, while the others don't 'get it'.
'As they walk out she cannot name the change, the dislocation.
It is as if the lozenges of light in that foyer ceiling
have been reassembled, the blood beats in her head
as though newly transfused, these people strangers,
speaking a dulled and muffled language.'
There are tears over the heartbreak of losing a baby in 'Eating Earth', and then tears of joy at finally having a child in 'Thank you'.
You can feel the injustice in 'The Poor Commissioners', which recounts the true story of a group of Irish famine victims who died in the snow in 1849 while the 'Poor commissioners', who were supposed to help them, refused to see them because they were having dinner inside. However, Kennedy brings it into the present. We can shake our heads at those Poor Commissioners, but the poor
'... are with us, trudging with the last of their energy,
thousands of miles now, from poorhouses and famine fields,
chilled and exiled, holding pitchforks or children
or unsigned paperwork,
forged, faded identifications, the wrong currencies,
they are with us and we will not see them ...'
The poem about the rescue of the Chilean miners in 2010 is also moving, with one of the miners declaring, 'I have been with God and the devil ... and I seized the hand of God. It was the better hand.'
However, I also liked Kennedy's ability to capture the everyday. In '8 x 10 colour enlargements $16.50', she tells the story of a woman who entered a photo of her children in a competition. The judge singled the photo out and said it would have been among the winners but unfortunately it didn't meet the theme of 'Images of Rural Life'. When the poet later tells her how much she liked the photo, the woman says, 'You know ... it didn't break the rules. This was the first moment my children ever saw rain.'
If you love well-crafted poetry that gives lots of food for thought, I'd highly recommend this collection.