| Stay Bonesby Liz Bahs
 £10 (pub. 2020)
            Liz Bahs’s debut collection of poetry straddles continents and generations – from a childhood in America to an adult life in the UK, from long-dead relatives to loved ones today. A family history is brought alive in a photographic sequence: “Through green shagpile fields, she gallops on / tiptoe” (Chicken Pox Nude), while in University of Florida: Jennings Hall we meet Lisa: ‘in the hallway, between the toilets / and the fire escape, skinny Lisa roller-skated / in her un- derwear, Budweiser in hand”. We also encounter Tony “in silver stilettos, tunes his voice higher”, a sex worker called Victoria, and the pilot of Flight 1549 who landed his plane on the Hudson river. A poignant medley of insights and char- acters, delivered with wit and grace, this collection lingers after the final page.
                 Praise for Stay Bones:   “In STAY BONES, metaphors of lenses and photography cohere for the poet
  to capture some keenly-observed and poignant memories. Here are insightful character portraits of family and friends, among others, written in an impres- sive range of forms, voices, styles and registers. These beautifully observed poems are elemental and steeped in image, place and character. They also open some very varied doors that are at once personal and public, tender and funny, sensual and sensory. Liz Bahs has a wonderful way with the everyday, and with contemporary material, just as she does with lyric evocation. STAY BONES is beautifully phrased and musical, each poem shows the reader just enough, but leaves us wanting more : ‘the haunt of her voice / calling me after her’. A wonderful first full collection.”  Andy Brown   Mowing                      
 
 I cannot write about mowing the lawn while I mow it. I cannot write on the white 
  brick wall, or on the back of one hand. I
 cannot write on anything in the garden while I struggle with the
 orange cord that keeps wrapping around my boot and throwing
 itself in the mower’s path. I cannot write about mowing while
 I mow, about the rhythm of the blades over the deep field
 of grass, about the growl and shriek as they slice stones and
 muddy earth. I cannot write about the cold breeze on the back
 of my neck as I work over the same ground three times, the
 lawn calf-deep and soaked from autumn rain. While I mow, I
 cannot write about the grassy tang that smells of haricots verts,
 green beans. I cannot write about mowing as I move orange
 metal from corner
  to corner, tree to tree, the pavement mapping
 the shape of lawn grown wild. I cannot write it as I wrestle with
 the beast this lawn has become after months of not mowing. I
 can’t mow when I must write, so I make the whirring stop, then
 crouch to collect mounds of grass too wet to be sucked into the
 mechanism: mossy with leaf mulch, trampled by the mower’s
 triple pass. I clear them to clear my head. I gather the clumps
 until my hands are green with crushed chlorophyll, until my
 fingertips are gold with new words and the light of grass under
 my skin.
 
 
 (from Stay Bones) | 
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