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The Violinist in Spring

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Tender and playful musings on the feeling of belonging guide this perceptive first collection of poems that draws attention to the everyday and commonplace and rewards readers with fresh insights and elegant vistas.

72 pages, Paperback

First published April 28, 2006

About the author

Anna Smaill

6 books110 followers
Anna Smaill lives in Wellington with her husband, novelist Carl Shuker, and her daughter. She studied performance violin at Canterbury University and creative writing at the International Institute of Modern Letters at the University of Victoria, and has a PhD in English Literature from University College London. She is the author of one book of poetry (The Violinist in Spring, VUP 2005) and her poems have been published and anthologised in New Zealand and the United Kingdom. Her first novel The Chimes will be published by Sceptre in Feburary 2015.

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Sienna.
376 reviews78 followers
January 19, 2013
I wanted love these poems, but I don't, somehow, or can't. I do admire them, though: they're beautiful and rhythmic and thoughtful, telling and re-telling and mulling over stories in a way that brings new perspective. So I like them a great deal, like "Little Song," and this meta-poem about its predecessors.

Early Work

The one where the sky
is pale like bone
and the theme is the lives
of people observed on the bus.

*

The one with the lines
'I am leaning in the wind of sleep'
which includes an intricate description
of patterns the rain has made on concrete.

*

The one about the lovers stretched along the grass
while, blade by blade,
the sun moves over Albert Park.

*

The one with the imagined lover that sees
the shadows gather in eaves beneath his eyes.
The brittle matter of the present moment: concrete and clear like glass.
The sound of the imagined glass, like milk bottles clinked together,
coiny and silverish.


And "The Vision," which seems to see life through a microscope, emerging from a cave, speaking in tongues, passionate and terrible and torn:

A beach of wind and blackened water.
The stones are bleached hard white,
the wood to a pale, smooth blond
of intricate, immeasurable worth.

You limber up beside the ocean,
wet your legs to knee-high rolling.
While I am dazed and levelled out
by the stretch of bled and burning detail.

This will be the site of all our fights,
a place that is the edge of words,
the edge of water; anger is a flight
of hardened-out and whitened stone,

you flaring up against me, ascending
and then the bright light
haloes your eyes and we
are covered in it, eclipsed.


This slight debut collection — forty-eight poems in five sections — makes me curious, hungry, to read more by Smaill, to discover where she'll head next. No, it's not love. But it might be something more interesting.
Profile Image for Simon Sweetman.
Author 9 books54 followers
August 31, 2014
It was good to read these again - and to understand them (more fully); for they're among the best poems I've ever read.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

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