3.
Moss picked her wayover the mosaic of strange things away from his bed andbuttoned herself out the doorwhile he was in the bathroom without saying goodbye.Why? Becausegoodbye seemed like an apple i.e. needing a lot ofexplaining.She walked along the street feeling new-born, stretchedto let in light.The bark on the trees was rougher in the palms of her hands.She carriedhis weight in her backpack, his words as loose changein her pursehis essence in a thermos for comfort and emergencies.
She noticedshe could see sideways. Cars approaching. The ghostthat she always knewlived in the passage. I knew it. As a child rasping to bedshe'd open her eyesas wide as possible to let in all the possible lightand the ghost inbut the moment she felt it passing (not dying, passingas ghosts do)she'd blink and the ghost would be gone. The others(the living, Mum, Dad etc)in the light of the living room as if etched on a jugwould call outSee? It was nothing, there is no ghost and look backat the TV.Now Moss is wide open and the ghostis physicalyou can reach out and touch it like this table this chair.
While she was outa furniture truck came and moved her into his body.In her room you can seethe marks on the wall where the furniture stood for so manyyears. Years.
The poem follows Moss, a young woman giant, who is trying to hide her substantial size from her lover Paul, a normal sized man. The poem/section above is part of chapter nine and occurs just after Moss and Paul have spent their first night together. Of the book Kennedy has written, “[it] reconfigures myth in a contemporary setting. As the descendent of Irish immigrants to Aotearoa/New Zealand, I am interested in where and how diasporas find us today.” The poem does feel like a modern day myth that is lyrical, funny, and quietly satirical of modern etiquette. It also does an excellent job of balancing the imagery and tone of a myth with a contemporary setting and voice. According to the NZ Book Council, Kennedy was once a piano teacher and a music librarian which explains her attention to sound and the alternating long / short line form that repeats its rhythm and ties the poem together. Another extract from the poem can be found here.
As well as poetry Anne Kennedy also writes fiction, autobiography and screenplays, and is the co-editor for the online journal Trout. She has collected a fair few awards such as the BNZ Katherine Mansfield Short Story Award, the ICI Award and Kennedy was also the Literary Fellow at the University of Auckland. She lives in Honolulu and is an Assistant Professor at the University of Hawai'i.
This week's Tuesday Poem editor is Sarah Jane Barnett, a writer and reviewer living in Wellington. Sarah is currently working on a creative PhD at Massey University that looks at the way the human/nonhuman relationship is portrayed in contemporary poetry. You can check out her blog at http://theredroom.org.
For more Tuesday Poems from the rest of the Tuesday Poem community browse our live blog roll in the sidebar – if the header says ‘Tuesday poem’ you know there’s a poem in there somewhere!
This week's Tuesday Poem editor is Sarah Jane Barnett, a writer and reviewer living in Wellington. Sarah is currently working on a creative PhD at Massey University that looks at the way the human/nonhuman relationship is portrayed in contemporary poetry. You can check out her blog at http://theredroom.org.
For more Tuesday Poems from the rest of the Tuesday Poem community browse our live blog roll in the sidebar – if the header says ‘Tuesday poem’ you know there’s a poem in there somewhere!