In poems by Sarah Lawrence, harold coutts and Arielle Walker, three fresh, vivid voices arrive.In Clockwatching , Sarah Lawrence hurtles us into a world full of friends and homes and things, and wonders what they all might leave behind: If it s toothache or budget / margarine or perhaps / another world altogether. harold coutts longing reflects on gender ( if gender is a taste i am cutting out my tongue ), bodies ( pubelessness ) and the rest ( there isn t a manual on when you re writing someone a love poem and they break up with you ). And in river poems Arielle Walker steps right into the water because a poem is a fluid thing all wrapped up in fish skin and finds stories of sealskins, harakeke and thistle, kanuka and manuka, alder and elder.Brimming with vivid beauty, the contemporary and the inflections of memory, AUP New Poets 9 shows just what new writing can open up.
Sarah Lawrence (she/her) is a Pneke-based poet, performer, musician and pizza waitress. She recently dropped out of law school to study acting at Toi Whakaari: New Zealand Drama School. Her parents are thrilled. She won the Story Inc Prize for Poetry in 2021, and you can find her writing in Starling, Landfall, A Fine Line and The Spinoff.
harold coutts is a poet and writer based in Te Whanganui-a-Tara. They have a hoard of unread books and love to play Dungeons & Dragons. Their work can be found across various New Zealand literary journals such as bad apple, Starling, rongohau | Best New Zealand Poems, Poetry New Zealand Yearbook, and in Out Here: An Anthology of Takatpui and LGBTQIA+ Writers from Aotearoa edited by Chris Tse and Emma Barnes (Auckland University Press, 2021).
Arielle Walker (Taranaki, Ngruahine, Ngpuhi, Pkeh) is a Tmaki Makaurau-based artist, writer and maker. Her practice seeks pathways towards reciprocal belonging through tactile storytelling and ancestral narratives, weaving in the spaces between. Her work can be found in Stasis Journal, Turbine | Kapohau, Tupuranga Journal, Oscen: Myths and No Other Place to Stand: An Anthology of Climate Change Poetry from Aotearoa New Zealand (Auckland University Press, 2022).