but first i call your name by Hadassa Tal Translated by Joanna Chen (Shearsman Books)

tearsinthefence's avatarTears in the Fence

The collection is composed of seven short parts each with incantatory titles that together could create a poem of their own:

within the whirlpool of your loss

run away, leave the poem

one instant – you’re gone

I will not be able to lift you

the one with no name

torso

the purple rose of Tel Aviv

Poems in ‘but first I call your name’ are elusive and ambiguous and based on paradox. Loss hovers between the binaries of beauty and pain: ‘apart from everything/nothing has changed’ says the epigraph on the opening page. The spirit of the lost ‘you’ wanders along ‘in the opposite direction/to laughter’. There are motifs of silence, birds, roses, music and dreams but pain is ‘nailed’, one title is ‘lacerations from an unsent letter’ and there is reference to ‘the crimson bond of blood’ while angels are warned to ‘take caution/with a slaughtering knife’. ‘Silence’…

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Honoured and delighted to be among the stunningly talented poets that make up the ten waves and growing of Iambapoet. It is so much better to hear the poet read their work. A Must Listen. Thankyou, Anthony for your graft and hard work and the amazing support you give your fellow poets

https://www.iambapoet.com/paul-brookes

The High Window, Summer 2022: Final Instalment

The High Window Review's avatarThe High Window

Logo revised

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With this  final instalment all the new material in the  Summer 2022 issue of The High Window can now be accessed via the top menu:

1. A selection of homegrown and international Poetry from 39 poets.

2. Poetry by Tom Laichas, the Featured American Poet.

3. Translations of French-language Poetry from Africa and the Arab World edited by Patrick xxWilliamson.

4.  An Essay by Edmund Prestwich on translating Dante.

5. A comprehensive Reviews section.

6. Poetry from Michał Choiński, the second Featured Poet.

7. An art feature from Rowena Sommerville, who is The High Window’s Resident Artist for xx2022.

To coincide with this isssue the High Window Press is publishing two new books by Mervyn Linford and Timothy Dodd. Details will be found on the Press page.

Enjoy!

David

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French-language poetry from Africa and the Arab world 

The High Window Review's avatarThe High Window

african poetry

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The editor of The High Windowwould like to thank Patrick Williamson and his team of translators for all their hard work in putting together this supplement of poetry intranslation. [Ed.]

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INTRODUCTION

Curating this supplement was a great pleasure, and a special thanks to Tahar Bekri for guiding my selection. I am grateful to the contemporary poets, many of whom I know personally, for their kind contributions, and to my fellow translators for their exceptional work.

This supplement endeavours to present representative poetic voices in French-speaking countries of Africa and the Arab World. For it is an anomaly to separate North Africa from Sub-Saharan Africa. The poetry included here is written in French, for evident historical reasons, but clearly only one dimension of an overall poetic landscape shared with other national languages: Arabic, Fula, Bambara, Berber, Wolof, etc.

Past generations are represented by Leopold Sédar Senghor (Senegal), a…

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Not a list, not a poem, just a long, protracted sigh.

Jane Dougherty's avatarJane Dougherty Writes

My contribution to Day 21 of Paul Brookes’ 30DaysWild challenge.

I think we all know what we as individuals can do to help slow down climate change, famine, floods and mass migration for the poorest populations in the world. It’s simply that most of us won’t do it unless we’re forced.

I was going to post a very short, non-exhaustive list, but I won’t. We all know it by heart. Nor will I write a poem about saving nature, because poetry makes not one iota of difference.

There’s nothing that’s impossible or even difficult in being reasonable and humane. It’s not fascist or Medieval to stop wasting resources. It is simply the plain truth that our throw away clothes are produced in sweat shops often by children, that abattoirs are hell on earth, that those floating luxury palaces destroy everything they come in contact with.

And it’s depressing that we…

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Feaured Poet: Michał Choiński

The High Window Review's avatarThe High Window

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Michał Choiński teaches literature at the Jagiellonian University (Kraków, Poland). He has written two books on the history of American literature: Rhetoric of the Revival (V&R, 2016) and Southern Hyperboles (Louisiana State University Press, 2020). His first pamphlet, Gifts Without Wrapping came out with the Hedgehog Press in 2019, as a winner of a poetry competition. His second pamphlet Too Many Rooms is one of the finalists for Wolfson Press Chapbook Competition 2022. Choiński’s poems and translations of poems have appeared in journals in Poland, USA, UK and Canada (including Neon, Alba, The High Window or The Ekphrastic Review). He has taught literature and creative writing in the USA, in Italy, in the UK, and in Germany. In 2022, he’ll be a Fulbright Fellow at Yale University, writing his next book.

Website: https://michalchoinski.com/

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Michał Choiński writes in English, although Polish is his native language. In one…

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#30DaysWild. Day Twenty-one. Today we are tackling climate change at home. I will feature your photos, writing about tackling climate change at home. Can you make a piece of art, photo or poem/short prose based on the themes below every day in June? First drafts perfectly acceptable. Haikus, Tanka. Preliminary sketches, photos. I will feature all on the day, and add after, too.

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#NationalInsectWeek2022 20th-26th June. Tuesday – Cockroaches. Anybody written poems about/including Cockroaches? Artworks/photos welcome too. References to poems/artwork other than your own I will show as links in the post, unless the referenced author welcomes my use of their work. I will add to this posts throughout today, so don’t worry if your submission has not been posted, yet. Here are the prompts for the week: Monday – Beetles, Tuesday – Cockroaches, Wednesday – Flies, Thursday – Mayflies, Friday – Butterflies, Saturday – Ant, Bee and Wasp, Sunday – Dragonflies, and any other insects I missed during the week.

insect week 2022 poster

#NationalInsectWeek2022 20th-26th June. Monday – Beetles. Anybody written poems about Beetles? Artworks/photos welcome too. References to poems/artwork other than your own I will show as links in the post, unless the referenced author welcomes my use of their work. I will add to this posts throughout today, so don’t worry if your submission has not been posted, yet. Here are the prompts for the week: Monday – Beetles, Tuesday – Cockroaches, Wednesday – Flies, Thursday – Mayflies, Friday – Butterflies, Saturday – Ant, Bee and Wasp, Sunday – Dragonflies, and any other insects I missed during the week.

-Chloe Jacquet

Hades Instrument by Anna Saunders

-Anna Saunders

Bios And Links

-Anna Saunders

Anna Saunders has been described as ‘a poet who surely can do anything’ by The North, ‘a modern myth maker’ by Paul Stephenson, and Tears in the Fence said of her ‘Anna Saunders’ poetry is reminiscent of Plath – with all its alpha achievement and radiance’.

She is the author of Communion, (Wild Conversations Press), Struck, (Pindrop Press) Kissing the She Bear, (Wild Conversations Press), Burne Jones and the Fox, Ghosting for Beginners and Feverfew – all Indigo Dreams. Feverfew has been described as  ‘rich with obsession, sensuousness and potency’  by  Ben Ray, and  ‘a  beautiful and necessary collection’ by  Penny Shuttle.

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