Day of Poetry
September 27, 2011This was Saturday, day of the Poetry Book Fair in Exmouth Market. Why hasn�t something like that happened before? Never mind, it�s happened now thanks to CB Editions and it was wonderful. Imagine a church hall, complete with red velvet stage-curtains and metal icicles hanging from the ceiling. There are trestle tables all round the edge, covered with poetry books - 22 publishers from Anvil to zimZalla, from all points of the compass, co-existing amicably - and the hall is full of people talking about poetry. Scraps of publisher-conversation emerge. �Oh, I had such difficulty with [insert well-known name of modernist poet], he kept changing his mind about what to put in.� �So-and-so�s doing a lot of stuff online, he films himself writing and reading out at the same time.�



She chews these ants to dust
for you, who have become a spear for her,
a rocket launcher she will fire backwards.
She chews past nothing,
past ant-pockets of clarity,
past the ghost ants scaling her body,
and trains her throat to open.
There was too much to do and not enough time� between talking to the publishers (who are all heroes of course, to be publishing poetry), looking at books, meeting friends, going upstairs for readings or outside for a coffee in Exmouth Market. I didn�t register all the publishers. Where was superhero CB Editions who organised everything so well? I couldn�t take it all in. And I wish now that I�d bought more books; I only bought half a dozen while there. CB Editions, I promise I will if you run it again next year. Best of all, if this isn�t totally impractical, run it for several days so people can come back.

After the fair I walked down through Clerkenwell to the river and Tate Modern, where a workshop run by Pascale Petit was holding a reading - on the 7th floor, in a glass-lined room with wonderful views. People had used the paintings to write about their own stuff, and there was an impeccably designed Tate pamphlet. The last reader was Karen McCarthy Woolf with an utterly compelling poem, online here, which starts:
The Wish
spreads its branches so twigs scratch
third floor windows, pushes through cracked
glass into front rooms cluttered with books.
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