Books Magazine

This is Not Your Final Form: Emma Press

By Chris Mills @landing_tales

This is Not Your Final Form: Emma Press

Published by Emma Press, 2017, with entrants and winners of the Verve Poetry Competition.

" data-orig-size="1041,1444" sizes="(max-width: 216px) 100vw, 216px" data-image-title="This is not your Final Form" data-orig-file="https://talesfromthelandingbookshelves.files.wordpress.com/2018/02/this-is-not-your-final-form.jpg" data-image-meta="{"aperture":"3.4","credit":"","camera":"FinePix J10","caption":"","created_timestamp":"1519556875","copyright":"","focal_length":"9","iso":"200","shutter_speed":"0.016666666666667","title":"","orientation":"1"}" width="216" data-medium-file="https://talesfromthelandingbookshelves.files.wordpress.com/2018/02/this-is-not-your-final-form.jpg?w=216&h;=300" data-permalink="https://talesfromthelandingbookshelves.com/2018/03/22/this-is-not-your-final-form-emma-press/this-is-not-your-final-form/" alt="Cover of This is Not Your Final Form " height="300" srcset="https://talesfromthelandingbookshelves.files.wordpress.com/2018/02/this-is-not-your-final-form.jpg?w=216&h;=300 216w, https://talesfromthelandingbookshelves.files.wordpress.com/2018/02/this-is-not-your-final-form.jpg?w=432&h;=600 432w, https://talesfromthelandingbookshelves.files.wordpress.com/2018/02/this-is-not-your-final-form.jpg?w=108&h;=150 108w" class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3950" data-large-file="https://talesfromthelandingbookshelves.files.wordpress.com/2018/02/this-is-not-your-final-form.jpg?w=640" />For this post I am having a change of direction and featuring a poetry book as I have not done so for a quite a while (sadly remiss of me). The collection This is Not Your Final Form (edited by Richard O’Brien and Emma Wright) is comprised of entrants and winners from the Birmingham based 2017 Verve Festival Poetry Competition. This book isn’t a long term TBR item as it only took up residence on my bedside table a few months ago and I did start reading it straightaway. I was browsing on the Emma Press website and as a Brummagem lass now based in Dublin, this collection was too tempting to pass up, so dear reader, I bought a copy. The back-cover blurb says this is ‘a tough, unsentimental love letter to the Midlands metropolis, which finds beauty in concrete and unity in contradiction’. And there is certainly a lot of concrete in Birmingham to inspire conflicting emotions, especially as Birmingham never seems to achieve its ‘final form’. I suspect it never will.

Canals and stories

There are so many poems that I like in this anthology, that it is difficult to know what to feature in a short article such as this. I am simply going to pull out a few themes from the collection that particularly resonated with me, starting with that old saying about Birmingham having more canals than Venice. I think that one cropped up in three poems altogether. Here’s an extract from ‘Birmingham – some advice’ by Rob Walton which amused me, as it suggested that we should change the saying to better attract tourists to Birmingham:

Seems you have ‘more canals than Venice’,
but surely ‘more canals than roads’ would be more impressive.
And wetter. Which could lead to more souvenir towel sales.
I got soaked in Birmingham! How about you?

I like the sound of the idea, but would it work I wonder? Let’s have your tea towel designs on a postcard please! Kibriya Mehrban’s poem takes as its title ‘More Canals than Venice’ and links the man-made waterways of Birmingham with rivers, tears and the currents that brought her family to Birmingham from Kashmir:

We were washed into this world,
soaking it with our color.
Some stood, splattered, scandalised,
while others called us sisters and brothers,
offered us cloud cover.

When my grandfather first saw a girl in a hijab
working at the local post office,
he cried this city a river.

Mehrban’s poem tells us her family’s story though different generations and experiences. How they found a home in Birmingham despite the hostility of some people. This collection serves to remind us that Birmingham has been the scene of many family stories, some sad, some happy, during its long history. Birmingham also played a crucial role in the story of the modern nation. Rishi Dastidar’s lines say it all:

The middle is where the future started –
our modern world was invented here.
Minds, steam, capital met in manner uncharted –
the middle is where the future started.

An unsolved mystery

Continuing with the theme of story, what place would be complete without at least one unsolved mystery? The one featured in this collection was somewhat macabre and has proved endlessly fascinating to later generations as this poem proves. ‘Who put Bella in the Wych Elm Tree?’ by Helen Rehman is about a 1940s murder that remains unsolved to this day. In 1943, four boys were poaching in Hagley Wood when they discovered a skeleton, later found to be that of a female, hidden within a tree trunk. To cut a long story short, there have been many theories and stories around the discovery. These were partly fueled by the appearance of graffiti that gave a possible name to the dead woman. The poem title references one version of the provocative question, which appeared on locations around the Midlands after the remains were found.

As the last verse tells it, time has moved on, the remains can no longer be located and the mystery endures:

The skeleton’s mislaid, the experts can’t agree,
the boys are grown and gone and lost to history;
she haunts the city’s dreams and grows a mystery.
I wonder who put Bella in the wych elm tree.

Brummie-isms

I move onto what is possibly my favorite poem in the book as it references some of the Brummie expressions that I grew up with and still fondly remember. The strange thing about local quirks of language is that you accept them while young and it never occurs to you to ask where/why/how these expressions came about. Here’s a snippet from ‘Never in a rain of pig’s pudding’ by Jill Munro:

You can take the girl out of Brummagem,
let her leave behind old Winson Street.
dress her in some bostin Southern glad rags,
marry her to a yampy Cockney with some ackers

But don’t throw this babby out with the bathwater,
for so long as it’s a bit black over Bill’s mother’s
you’ll never take the Brummagem out of the girl –
even way down south, she’ll always be Our Kid.

I like the last line, it reminds me of my uncle calling my dad ‘Our Kid’ even though dad was the eldest brother. If anyone wants an explanation of some of the terms in the verses quoted, there is a handy guide on the Birmingham Live website, giving you fifty Brummie and Black Country words and phrases to chew over. Not all the phrases given necessarily originated in or are exclusive to Brum as language travels as people move around the country.

I’m going to finish with my own contribution to the topic of language with one of my Paragraph Planet pieces from 2016, with some of my Brummagem memories.

This is Not Your Final Form: Emma Press

Published on the site in March 2016.

" data-orig-size="406,253" sizes="(max-width: 406px) 100vw, 406px" data-image-title="Hesperus" data-orig-file="https://talesfromthelandingbookshelves.files.wordpress.com/2018/03/hesperus2.jpg?w=640" data-image-meta="{"aperture":"0","credit":"chris mills","camera":"","caption":"","created_timestamp":"1521713195","copyright":"","focal_length":"0","iso":"0","shutter_speed":"0","title":"","orientation":"0"}" data-medium-file="https://talesfromthelandingbookshelves.files.wordpress.com/2018/03/hesperus2.jpg?w=640?w=300" data-permalink="https://talesfromthelandingbookshelves.com/2018/03/22/this-is-not-your-final-form-emma-press/hesperus2/" alt="Hepserus: a 75 word piece from Paragraph Planet" srcset="https://talesfromthelandingbookshelves.files.wordpress.com/2018/03/hesperus2.jpg 406w, https://talesfromthelandingbookshelves.files.wordpress.com/2018/03/hesperus2.jpg?w=150 150w, https://talesfromthelandingbookshelves.files.wordpress.com/2018/03/hesperus2.jpg?w=300 300w" class="aligncenter wp-image-3960 size-full" data-large-file="https://talesfromthelandingbookshelves.files.wordpress.com/2018/03/hesperus2.jpg?w=640?w=406" />

I’ll just note that whereas Jill Munro’s poem has ‘faces as long as Livery Street’, I grew up with ‘arms as long as…’. Which just goes to show the adaptability of the local lingo.

That’s it for now and I hope it won’t be too long before I dig another poetry book out of the Landing Book Shelves!  

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