"Murray is the best kind of literary biographer" – The Financial Times.
For more information about the books of Nicholas Murray
click HERE and access his website
Winner of the 2015 Basil Bunting Award for poetry

Monday, 26 August 2013

Do People Still Buy Poetry?

Charlotte Mew
The news that the estimable CB Editions run by Charles Boyle is planning to wind itself up next year has been greeted with shock and regret by those who value individualistic, innovative and enterprising small press publishing.  Charles Boyle gives his reasons on his Facebook page and there have been, naturally, many comments.  But it seems to me that, in addition to the obvious factors such as the difficulty of the market, the reluctance of bookshops to host small press publications, the failure of public funding bodies to work out how to help small publishers in practical non-bureaucratic ways, there is a more fundamental issue: no one seems to be buying new poetry very much.  [Try sampling a Facebook parcel of poets' posts and see how rarely anyone reports breathlessly having bought someone's new collection and enjoyed it and is telling others to go out and buy it.  If poets themselves don't buy each other in numbers then we are in trouble.]

All poetry publishers, great and small, have been finding that sales are dropping though it is worth reminding ourselves that there never has been a golden age.  I used to admire the volumes in the Oxford University Press list in the 1970s and 1980s but I was told recently that the actual sales figures were surprisingly low.  I am reading at the moment the Collected Poems of Charlotte Mew published by Gerald Duckworth in 1953.  In the introduction by Alida Munro, wife of the Poetry Bookshop proprietor Harold Monro, she reveals that, exceptionally, 500 copies of Mew's debut collection The Farmer's Bride were published in 1929 when the Poetry Bookshop's normal print run was 250.  The Poetry Bookshop (and I have written elsewhere about this in my The Red Sweet Wine of Youth: The British Poets of the First World War and more recently Matthew Hollis has covered similar ground in his biography of Edward Thomas) was at the centre of British poetry in the years just before and during the First World War.  Anyone who cared about the future of poetry would know that the Imagists and Georgians championed by Monro were where it was at.  The history of modern poetry has confirmed this but...250 copies.

It sometimes feels that the poetry readership is finite, that all the marketing and tweeting in the world won't get it into four figures for a new book, but that can't be accepted passively so what do we do?  Is it that people are lazy and can't make the effort of special attention that poetry needs to yield up its pleasures?  I don't think we should blame the readers.  I would offer two explanations.  The first is that we lack proper criticism.  Strong, reliable, discriminating reviewers and critics (not eloquent puffs from the poet's friends masquerading as a book review) could help sort out the wheat from the chaff. I believe (maybe because I can't face the consequences of not believing) that if people are put in touch with the very best poetry being written they will buy it and read it as they still do, to some extent, in the case of quality literary fiction. But reviewing just now is partial, selective, lacking in critical authority and doesn't even perform the basic function of telling us what has come out.  Excellent new books of poetry sometimes receive no reviews at all. So unless you happen to be lucky enough to stumble on one of those books they remain silent phantoms in a warehouse or on the poet's Mum's mantlepiece. Some form of comprehensive monthly listing with short reviews would enable us at least to know what was out there.

Secondly, we need to improve the marketing and distribution of poetry, to get it into the bookshops.  Booksellers like Foyles need to wake up and start stocking small press poetry for starters.  The funds of the Arts Council for England, Literature Wales etc need to be used to set up some sort of network for small poetry presses, a kind of affordable Inpress that you didn't have to pay to join that was the equivalent of Italian olive growers banding together as co-operatives to market their produce.  A pilot project, some hard-headed research, some practical scheme for helping poets and their readers get in touch with each other, would be far more helpful than individual grants to poets.

In the end if the poetry being offered to readers is no good then they can't be blamed for declining to sample it but I believe that there is enough decent poetry being published to tempt them if they can be enabled to locate it.  Otherwise poetry will die from neglect.  And that, we can all agree, is unthinkable.

Monday, 29 July 2013

A Poetry Reading in Liverpool

If you are in Liverpool on 16th August I look forward to meeting you




Wednesday, 17 July 2013

A New Collection of Animal Poems

I am very pleased to say that my latest pamphlet collection from Melos Press, Of earth, water, air and fire: animal poems is now available.

The collection of twenty-seven poems about animals, birds, insects, with a few mythical creatures bundled in for good measure, contains poems that are all new and previously unpublished and can be purchased online from Melos at £6.



Monday, 15 July 2013

Ledbury: Poems in the Sun

Nicholas Murray reading
at the Shell House Gallery,
Ledbury Poetry Festival, 14th July 2013
I very much enjoyed reading yesterday at the Ledbury Poetry Festival on one of the hottest days of the year so far.  Ledbury deserves its reputation as a delightful, relaxed place for a poetry festival.  I was reading from my Acapulco: New and Selected Poems (Melos) and from my new pamphlet collection of animal poems, the ink on which was barely dry [more information on this new title and how to order available very shortly here].

The audience was particularly responsive and nice to meet, except for the man who had come along to promote his poems, refused to buy any from the poet reading, and began to perform his own poems, unsolicited, to the dispersing audience whose dispersal was thus gently accelerated.  These narcissists are, I suppose, as much a part of the poetry scene as wasps on a hot July day and must be considered part of the fun.

I shall be back next year!

Wednesday, 10 July 2013

Ledbury Here We Come

I am reading at the Ledbury Poetry Festival on Sunday (14 July) in the Shell House Gallery between 12.15 and 12.35pm from my collection Acapulco: New and Selected Poems (Melos) and from my forthcoming pamphlet Of Earth, Water, Air and Fire: animal poems (also from Melos) and there is a possibility that copies of that may be back from the printer in time to make advance copies available for sale.  Fingers crossed.

It's a particular pleasure to be reading at Ledbury in Herefordshire because this is the neighbouring county to Powys where I live and the weather looks like being lovely too.

More news about the new pamphlet when it is ready to be ordered but watch the Melos website for details.

Wednesday, 26 June 2013

Bring out the Red Parrot: Poetry in Powys

If anyone is passing through the Welsh Marches next Monday stop by and hear some poetry at the No 46 Wine Bar in Presteigne, Powys.  I will be reading, alongside Chris Kinsey and Liz Lefroy, from my most recent book, Acapulco: New and Selected Poems (Melos) and from my next pamphlet of poems about animals, birds and other creatures.


Sunday, 12 May 2013

Wales Comes to Soho


A Literary Walk and Readings at The Wheatsheaf, Soho on 25th May.



I will be there!


Literary Tourism 2013: Soho Welsh, Riotous Rhondda, Literary Ogmore and R S Thomas's Eglwysfach


After sold out literary tours to Machen country and Brenda Chamberlain's Bangor last year we have some more exciting new literary events arranged for you this year in partnership with Literature Wales' brilliant literary tourism programme. Join us on a sojourn to London for Soho Welsh, a trip down memory lane with Rachel Trezise and Boyd Clack in Riotous Rhondda and explore the Merthyr Mawr sand dunes on horseback to find out more about Dr Dannie Abse’s time in Ogmore. So much fun to be had! Book early to avoid disappointment.
 
 
1. Soho Welsh: The Wheatsheaf Readings with Tomos Owen, Nicholas Murray and Lewis Davies
 
Saturday 25 May, 2013
 
Join Cardiff University lecturer Dr Tomos Owen, author of Real Bloomsbury NicholasMurray, and writer Lewis Davies in exploring Welsh writers and their London lives. We will walk in the footsteps of cult gothic horror writer Arthur Machen, revered short story writer Rhys Davies, founding editor of the Everyman’s Library series Ernest Rhys and novelist Dorothy Edwards The tour includes readings and short talks in the streets and pubs of Soho and Fitzrovia, and finishes at The Wheatsheaf – a former haunt of Dylan Thomas, Augustus John and George Orwell.

The readings at the Wheatsheaf will include poets Susan Grindley and Ian Parks so be there!