Erato

Deryn Rees-Jones

£9.99

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Poetry Wales Press
30 June 2019
ISBN: 9781781725108
Paperback
72 pages

From the publisher

Shortlisted for Wales Book of the Year 2020

Shortlisted for the T.S. Eliot Prize 2019

"Rees-Jones moves between prose and poetry as if to test language in the act of transfiguration. Her imagination interpolates the personal body in the political and natural worlds with deep sensuousness, a muscular intelligence." - Sandeep Parmar

"Rees-Jones provides a means – a subjective register – for hearing what ‘circumstances of sound electrifies the heath, / open up the dark.’ With admirable exactness she charts the existential bewilderment that frustrated Freud, his narrow paradigms lacking the dimensionality of these unflinching poems." - PN Review

Named after the Greek muse of lyric poetry, Erato combines documentary-style prose narratives with the passionate lyric poetry for which Rees-Jones is renowned. Here, however, as she experiments with form, particularly the sonnet, Rees-Jones asks questions about the value of the poet and poetry itself. What is the difference, she asks in one poem, between a sigh and a song? Erato’s themes are manifold but particularly focus on personal loss, desire and recovery, in the context of a world in which wars and displacement of people has become a terrifying norm. 

In the narrative of transformations that unfold, the invocation of Erato also carries with it a sense of errata and erasure.  As stories and ideas are repeated, and recurring imagery -- of fires, bees, birds – is continually reframed, we are asked to replay, rethink, rename. How do we step out from the ‘perpetual loop’ of trauma? And how do we find a way of processing painful change? Here, bewilderment in the face of ongoing historical tragedy is countered by the Rees-Jones’s close and careful attention to immediate or remembered experience, and the importance of the body, whether this is lying awake at night with a sleepless child, the felling of a backyard tree, walking in Paris observing the encampments of refugees, or the dreamlike conversation she has with the radio about bombs and the use of drones.  

Erato includes elegies for family members and close friends, including an impressive and moving long poem ‘I.M.’. Also included here is the autobiographical ‘Caprice’ in which Rees-Jones explores with musical abandon ‘the scribble-mess’ of self, and the ‘grainy, atomized emotion coursing through in middle age’.

Throughout Erato there is a compelling sense of continued curiosity, of thoughtful questioning, of questing for truths.  The author’s background in the classics, her immersion in modern poetry as well as a deep interest in modern art, all combine to influence the essential quality of this work. 

"Here is the poet as rhapsode, an open channel for giddily overlapping streams of grief, desire, bewilderment, awe and rage." – Josh Cohen

"Deryn Rees-Jones shows us that in the right hands lyric is the sharpest, subtlest and most devastating instrument we possess." – Sasha Dugdale

"...a forcefield book, a fierce and beautiful thing." - Vona Groarke