The short version of this review might read:
When I began reading How
I Learned To Sing, I decided that I’d mark all the pages I really
enjoyed. It wasn’t long before I ran out of post-its.
The longer version says the same in more words:
Mark Robinson has put together something rather wonderful in
his collection of new and selected poems. It’s a substantial body of work that
is hugely engaging and engendered a wide variety of emotions in this reader.
It’s divided into several sections: The Dunno Eligies, How
I Learned To Sing, Esperanto
Anyone, from a Balkan Exchange, from Half A Mind, from Gaps Between Hills and from
The Horse Burning Park. In this sense, it’s the best of the poet’s work and
spans many years of penning.
The sections carry different flavours, but they do share common
ground.
The theme I most enjoyed is one I’d call ‘loved and lost’. I
don’t mean this in relation to meeting people and moving on, but in terms of
the sense that all great moments, big or small, have passed. No matter how
delicious the pie, it doesn’t last forever. This is such a great theme here
because Robinson’s scope for love is enormous. We get to zoom in on details of
everyday life and then back out again to gain perspective. We can find amazing
ways of looking at the world through cooking and kitchen disasters. There are
journeys through the generations that are intimate and personal on the one hand
and universal at another level. There’s even a love of bitterness and
frustration, for to feel these things one needs to be alive and that should be
celebrated at some level. There’s occasional resignation but, like all else,
this is transient and Robinson is able to regroup and find a way to cope or to
move forwards with something resembling hope.
My favourite sections are the How
I Learned To Sing of the title and those from Half A Mind. I found these sections incredibly moving. Many of
them capture moments of family life, written as grandchild, child, partner and
round the cycle of parenthood. The work achieves a huge amount in so few words
that it made me wonder why I don’t read more poems and has me resolving to make
sure I find space for poetry in my world whatever that requires.
A lot of the poems are concentrated and intense, so it was
also a treat to be presented with bursts of humour that allowed for the cleansing
the palate from time to time.
What I do realise is that I won’t be able to put together
the words to do this work justice. I thoroughly enjoyed it and felt hugely
moved on many occasions.
I’m sure that all who come to read it will take their own
versions and interpretations away with them. For me, I felt reassured about my
own life somehow, as if the journey through the ups and downs helped me to work
something through my system that needed shifting.
Totally engaging, hugely enjoyable and ultimately rather
uplifting.
So here’s to you, Mr Robinson. Bravo.
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