Anne Elvey's 'Kin' shortlisted for the 2015 Kenneth Slessor Prize for Poetry

Congratulations to the luminous and talented Anne Elvey, whose book Kin has been shortlisted for the Kenneth Slessor Prize this year. Keeping fine company with Michael Aiken, Judith Beveridge, Libby Hart, John Mateer and David Malouf.The judges' comments on Kin can be read below; comments on the other shortlisted books can be found here. Best of luck to all!'This spare poetry investigates the body as a sensorium in its careful observations of the various ways of being in the world. The poetry’s sensual lyricism demonstrates how, through the body, we experience gravity, weather, light and sound. Skin is one interface between us and other humans and between us and the natural and urban world. The language of the poetry is itself a kind of skin that registers the bodily experience of kinship with trees, birds, sand and rain but also with the urban environment of steel, bitumen and glass.These relationships are fragile; the poems remind us of human mortality. Ecological damage and death also impact upon the non-human world and much of the poetry has an elegiac tone. The possibility of forgiveness and grace flutter at the edges of these poems like the many birds they figure. The poems also investigate other forms of kinship such as ethical non-Indigenous approaches to Aboriginal country and the memorialisation of loss and destruction. Kin is a meditative and thoughtful collection. It is marked with an unobtrusive erudition and intertextual references to a number of other poets ranging from Wilfred Owen to Judith Wright.'Kin can be purchased here.

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Anne Elvey's 'Kin' reviewed by Jessica Wilkinson

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Phillip Hall reviews 'The Vision of Error' and 'Tide' by John Kinsella