Eoghan Walls Pigeon Songs is Derry-born Eoghan Wallâs second collection of poems from Seren after his much-praised debut, The Salt Harvest. From the first piece, âAngry Birdsâ we have a sense of the poetâs themes and preoccupations: we have a richly metaphorical and densely allusive style, a pull towards formal metre and structures, most often the sonnet or a proto-sonnet with couplets, as here. There is also the occasional vigorous vulgarity, adding a touch of blue humor to the canvas, breaking up the formal rigor.
Family is a potent presence in poems inspired by parents, grandparents(as here), partners, children.They often emit a sort of energy, a fierce gravitational pull of emotion around the burning heart of a poem ultimately about love, or the sorrow of losing a loved-one. There is frequently a strangeness that can be both comic, as in the âThe Tooth Burierâ,inspired by a childâs reaction to a lost tooth, and eerie as in âThe Weight of Herâ where the child whispers that âshe wishes to be deadâ. Parenthood weighs large as alternately joyful, terrifying and essential to everyday existence.
Also here is a richly imagined and mourned-for natural world as in âIce Bear Dreamsâ, âThe Sins of the Otterâ; âThe Beast of the Galapagosâ; as well as animals in hybrid, mythological attitudes: âThe Frog Princeâ; âWhen All the Men Turned into Geeseâ and the ever-present Pigeons who recur throughout the book as totems for various states of inquisition, rumination, urban living and means of temporary liberation from the mundane. There is, as might be expected in an Irish poet, a flavor of lost religiosity as in âSunday at the Reliquaryâ, echoing Heaneyâs monks of Clonmacnoise in âStepping back from the miraculous as we had known it.â Yet science provides its own unlikely, unearthly parables, like the scary, âKepler 22Bâ with a surface consisting ofnever-ending tusnamis. There are also riffs on âString Theoryâ, and âThe Principals of Collisionâ.
A socio-political awareness is never far away with poems about âBordersâ and a particularly about a childâs drawing of refugees in âThe Bright-Crayoned Universeâ. We are invited to stare, to mourn, to laugh, even to dance âThe Rare Old Mountain Jigâ in this various, lively, compelling second book from the gifted Eoghan Walls.
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64 Pages