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broadsheet features US poet Cameron La Follette

The eleventh issue of my poetry journal, broadsheet: new new zealandpoetry, features the North American poet, Cameron La Follette. The issue is the first to feature La Follette's work internationally. It includes comment on her work by Niel Wright and myself.

Also included is new work by Tony Beyer, Richard Berengarten (UK), John Dennison, Michael Duffett (USA), John O'Connor, Zarah Butcher-McGunnigle, Laura Morris, P V Reeves, and two poets of New Zealand's literary past O E Hugo (1855-1915) and Erihapeti Murchie (1923-1997).

To read the online pdf of the issue, go to:
http://broadsheetnz.wordpress.com

 

 

 

 

Mark Pirie’s new Super Rugby poem

I wrote the following new poem, Sidelights, watching the Hurricanes play the Blues at Eden Park in April. It was a very good game to watch.

The Blues performance is a credit to their coach Sir John Kirwan.

It was published by Tony Chad in the poetry journal Valley Micropress, April 2013.

Click on the link to read the poem: Sidelights.

Cricket Society Journal reviews King Willow

A brief but very good mention of the book I edited, King Willow: Selected Poems by Robert J Pope, appeared in the latest issue of the Cricket Society's Journal:

JOHN SYMONS

Review of King Willow: Selected Poems by Robert J Pope edited by Mark Pirie

HeadworX Publishing web: http://headworx.eyesis.co.nz

Mark Pirie is continuing to explore New Zealand literary history both old and new and here we have a selection of poems from a writer, Robert J Pope whose life (1865-1949) covered the birth of New Zealand cricket through to Walter Hadlee's determination on the post-war tour of England to be worthy of full-length Test Matches.

Although, well-regarded in his lifetime as with many poets, he became unfashionable although there now seems to be a reappraisal of his work. The selection from his work set out here contains only a single cricketing poem but his other work is well worth modern consideration. There is a wistful and elegiac tone to his war poetry - no drums and bugles and hurrahs - more sadness at lives lost and friends no longer to be greeted.

The only cricket poem "King Willow" was written to welcome in the 1932 season but there is a small section of cricket prose at the end of the book. I also liked his affectionate parody of W B Yeats in Billy's Tea which made me smile.

Not really enough perhaps to convince the cricket collector to add this to his library but Mark Pirie is ploughing a singular furrow as he explores the byways of New Zealand literature and deserves the praise that he is garnering. A writer and a publisher who are always worth seeking out.

(From The Journal of the Cricket Society, UK, Volume 26, No. 4, Spring 2013, p. 69-70).

Mark Pirie included in Rugby Poetry Anthology

Three of my poems were included in the recently released anthology of rugby poetry called Touchlines. It is mainly about the history of New Zealand rugby and the All Blacks.

It is a wonderful tour through historic newspapers unearthing many gems on famous rugby players of long ago i.e. the All Black Originals of 1905/06 and the Invincibles of 1924/25 up to and including recent legends like Sir John Kirwan and 2011 World Cup star Piri Weepu.

The book is edited by All Blacks historian Ron Palenski and my three poems in it are 'Scrum-feed' for Piri Weepu, 'The Cup' for Richie McCaw and 'The Wandering Bard' for poet Ernest L Eyre (a life member of the North Shore Rugby Club).

My own grandfather Tom Lawn (a club player 1919-1929) coached the North Shore Club back in 1938 with Bert Cooke, the All Black Invincible of 1924/25.

I also guest edited the Tuesday Poem blog, 30 April 2013, with an All Blacks poem by Robert J Pope from the book I recently published called King Willow.

Copies of Ron Palenski's Touchlines: An Anthology of Rugby Poetry can be purchased direct from the NZ Sports Hall of Fame, Dunedin. Price $22.00NZ. Email: [email protected] Copies can be purchased by credit card on telephone 64 3 477 7775. Website: http://nzhalloffame.co.nz