God Loves You

Kathryn Maris author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Poetry Wales Press

Published:1st May '13

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God Loves You cover

Kathryn Maris borrows rhythms, vocabulary and themes from the Bible in her new Seren collection of poems, God Loves You. The result is more than artful parody, although a sly wit is in evidence. It is an approach that accommodates large themes, unravelling them in new ways. The first section, 'What will the neighbours think?, is a kaleidoscopic view of the sins and sinners of the modern city and opens, appropriately enough, with a vision of a flood to rival Noah's. The poems feature domestic discord, gossip, suicide, celebrity and anxiety about the safety and behaviour of children and spouses. It says much about this poet's meticulous poise and tone that we are lured into these scenarios with our sympathies fully engaged. The following sections subvert scripture more directly. A mock-prayer opens: 'My father, who art in heaven,/ sits under an umbrella that is his firmament'; a sonnet begins: 'Kyrie eleison! I said it in the pub.' Such burlesque moments mask poignant themes of praise or blame, as well as being funny. A skilful use of form is characteristic, as in the sestina 'Darling, Will You Please Pick up those Books?'
Other pieces are set out in the numbered style of psalms or parables but have an entirely contemporary edge.

'Maris's poems strike me as an unlikely marriage between Wallace Stevens and Sylvia Plath - the aesthete playing on the edges of her own nerves, examining the myth of herself, skirting and side-stepping the blunt charges of language and loss the way an intellectual matador might sidestep a bull. It is a pretty enthralling performance. Maris carries the small bright sword of wit rather conspicuously so the bull might know she is not defenceless and the glitter of the wit arrests us too - This has a Dorothy Parker air, metropolitan and crowded, intimate with other lives whose own limits may never be known.' - George Szirtes in Poetry London "My mind is open, / so the devil can get in" says the speaker of "Knowledge is a Good Thing," and there's a delicious sense of both open-mindedness and devilry in Maris's work. Her company is quirky, stimulating and sparklingly intelligent. You could say she's like Sylvia Plath with added chutzpah. But, really, Kathryn Maris is like no-one but herself. - Carol Rumens

ISBN: 9781781720356

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 110g

62 pages