An eclectic mix of energy, enjoyment and enlightenment.
This is the second Forward Book of Poetry that I have read and now review and I find it an anthology that gives access to some of the best contemporary poets of this time, including, in this volume, the real heavyweights of Carol Ann Duffy, John Kinsella, Hugo Williams and Liz Berry, refreshing to see the bigger names turning out in force.
It will always be the case that some of the poems will strike a chord with the reader while others won’t. What is good about the Forward anthologies is that the opening of pages gives the chance for opening minds to the wealth of poetry being written in Britain now, across varied topics such as deafness, inequality and tragedy such as the Hillsborough disaster in 1989. Excerpts are included of Truth Street by David Cain which combines the eye-witness testimonies of the survivors at the second inquest to create this evocative and saddening epic-poem as an oral history:
‘he was brought to me.
He was on a broken down billboard.’
Other notable poems for me include:
Vona Groarke’s ‘No one uses doilies anymore’
'an inkling of words,
as ornament,
the way stars and, yet,
flowers are’;
Kei Miller, ‘To Know Green From Green’; Morgan Parker, ‘I Feel Most Coloured When I Am Thrown Against A Sharp White Background’ which are nestled in the heart of the anthology, a trilogy of gems in this treasure chest of words.