Thursday 7 March 2013

More haiku:

Spring. But in my heart
is a patch of emptiness
the shape of a cat.

The woodpecker pecks
happily although he's got
nothing published yet.

Monday 11 February 2013

Scintilla 16

Scintilla 16 is a very good read, and I'm not just saying that because I have a poem in it.

Orchards: honourable mention


A very welcome mention in the New York Review of Books on Jan 10, in John Banville's footnote to another Rilke review:
'He was never to feel entirely at home in the language, yet he wrote a large number of poems in French, most of which can be found in two delightful and beautifully translated dual-language volumes, Valaisian Quatrains, translated by Peter Oram (Cardiff, Wales: Starborn, 2008), and Orchards, translated by Peter Oram and Alex Barr (Cardiff, Wales: Starborn, 2011).'

Iain - a new poem


IAIN

The tall, tall, slim French boy stood
in the rain with his back to me, his head
snug in a hood. I thought
for a moment it was Iain, my friend Iain
(two i’s in his name) alive again.

In his attic
we pulled out 78s and it was then
I first heard When They Begin the Beguine
that voluptuous tune. One voluptuous night
we played strip poker with the delicious nieces
of Mrs Lichfield. (Very little flesh
got exposed.) We chased them round the garden
- Iain’s idea. Next day I said
he’d acted like a fool. ‘Did they
say that?’
he countered. ‘No, they didn’t.’

In his cellar and in my washhouse
we messed with flowers of suplhur
potassium permanganate, zinc,
and hydrochloric acid, and he told me
(as we reverently studied
Griffin and Tatlock’s catalogue of flasks,
beakers, pipettes, burettes, Liebig condensers,
all in voluptuous virgin Pyrex)
that Norma, whom we met on the cricket field
one rosy summer evening
and whom I ached for, really fancied me.
It was a lie.

In Barr’s Private Army
(we were eleven then) he was lance-corporal
but later in the Queen’s Own Khaki Squaddies
only a private. Nonetheless he claimed,
‘I’m dating the Colonel’s daughter.’
Was that a lie? I see him saying it,
hair butchered by the regimental barber,
tall, horse-faced, outside the Jolly Sailor
with great aplomb. On that same spot
I learned that he had died, at forty-two.
The French boy turned, and oh, he wasn’t Iain.

Late one afternoon
returning to the Scout camp from a hike
(it seems we’d lost the rest of our patrol)
he made us do a three-mile detour
along a country lane. I counted telegraph poles
to deal with weariness. When I complained he said,
with all the authority of his extra year,
‘Scouts do things the hard way.’
 

Monday 28 January 2013

Stories that have appeared so far


I'm listing my stories that have appeared so far so anyone interested in joining me to form a writing group can see what I’ve been doing. I’ve only listed stories, not poetry or plays, which is why there appear to be long gaps.

In 2011 ‘Homecoming’ won joint second place in the Willesden Herald short story competition and ‘Rich Bitch’ was runner-up in the Oxford Editors competition.
‘My Stopwatch’ appeared in New Scientist in 2007, and ‘Trouble’ in Stand in 1997.
In 1996 ‘The Visitor’ was broadcast on Radio 4, ‘Snaps’ appeared in Paris Transcontinental, ‘We Practice French with M. Tigny’ in Metropolitan, and ‘Whole’ in Staple.                                   
‘The Fan’ appeared in the Bridport Prize Anthology in 1995.
‘The Smell of Happiness’ was broadcast on Radio 4 in 1994.                       
In 1994 ‘Doing It’ appeared in The Affectionate Punch and ‘Romey and Jullit’ in Stand.
Way back in 1983 ‘And Gnashing of Teeth’ appeared in Iron magazine. Around then another story whose title I forget won a small Bridport Prize (the judge was John Fowles). And in 1981 ‘The Mouse’ won first prize in the Radio Piccadilly children’s short story competition in Manchester.