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"Cronin's remaking, re-envisaging, re-creation of Cesar Vallejo's
astonishing masterpiece Trilce enables a re-imagining of many of
Vallejo's lifelong obsessions: childhood, the family unit, poverty,
injustice and the anarchic joy of language. Just as in Vallejo
there is an intimate self-exposure taking place alongside and
within the disruption of language. The social structures that
marginalise people and their experiences are seen as embodied in
the language structures and conventions rigidified in traditional
poetic and prosaic structures. Cronin, just like Vallejo, seeks to
break both open. All the levels of life-the banal, the most
elevated, the erotic, the pragmatic- collapse into each other. A
joyous sense of multiple voices liberates the poetic from tired
patterns: "All these things we use for walls/ when the walls fall
down!" (XVIII). Much of Cronin's play with Vallejo's 1922
experimental sequence originates in the gender difference between
herself and Vallejo and the humour to be found in male-centred
assumptions. A Ticket to Trilce provides admission to a private
female stocktake of an early 20th Century classic in a contemporary
Australian setting. A lover of Vallejo herself, Cronin provides us
with a passport to another version of his great vision." -Peter
Boyle
"This is poetry that goes direct to that other place and inhabits
it. in possession of loss has a clear sparseness, almost a
minimalism, that is also highly complex. Read as a single
book-length poem, it thinks our world without telling openly. As in
Inger Christensen's Alphabet, everything hangs together and speaks
the whole though one can't exactly say how. Like Celan and Rilke
before her, Cronin is a risk-taker: she can say 'love', 'loss',
'death', 'the heart', without tying the words to recognizable
stories or hiding behind the game of avoiding meaning. This is a
poetry that shoulders the big questions. Compared to so much that
is written in the English-speaking world, Cronin's poetry IS so
different and so itself." - Peter Boyle
Subtitled 'The Belated Love Poems of Thean Morris Caelli' - a
neglected 20th century poet much influenced by Celan and Vallejo -
this collection represents the merging of two fine Australian poets
into the consciousness of an other. Or An Other. Both authors
worked on each individual text, and thus it is a true joint effort,
not simply a kind of book-length renga. A remarkable departure for
two of the finest poets from Australia's current middle generation.
M.T.C. Cronin's last Shearsman collection 1-100, was awarded two
major literary prizes in her native Australia and also brought her
significant attention both in the UK and the USA. Her new
collection is in fact four small books in one, four separate
'notebooks', of which the Notebook of Signs is the first, and is
followed by the Notebooks of Shapes, Nerves and Sand. Ms Cronin
often works in longer forms - although equally adept at the short
lyric - and these four sequences demonstate her mastery in this
area.
is Australian poet MTC Cronin's tenth book and her second British
collection. A compositional tour de force, the sequence consists of
one hundred poems, the line-count arcing from a single line in poem
1 to fifty lines in poem 50, and thence back down to a single line
in poem 100. Like many forms, self-imposed or otherwise, Ms Cronin
uses this apparently restrictive structure to support a wonderfully
original unfolding of verse. Ms Cronin's work has been attracting
enormous interest in both Britain and North America, and this
volume will reinforce her burgeoning reputation.
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