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Ric Hool From Cullercoats (Tyneside), he moved to Wales in 1990 after five years journeying the islands and mainland of Spain. He now teaches in Blaenau Gwent. Ten years ago he initiated the poetry readings at the Hen & Chickens, which became, and remains, the hub of The Abergavenny Poetry Scene. With Bob Mole he began the Gwent Writing Squad which was to prove the prototype for all writing squads in Wales, providing workshops in creative writing for young people. He was briefly attached to the Beckley Group of poets in East Sussex, investigating woodland and open space as a natural platform for reading poetry. He remains interested in this possibility. His poetic themes are the psychological and geographical impact of place and space on the human experience. Water is a totem, poured from place to place and from experience to experience: an agent of informing.
For availability and prices please check out The Collective's book shop page.Voice From a Correspondent by Ric Hool The Collective Press isbn 1 899449 75 2 The joy of this writing is the way that Hool tackles difficult ideas head-on and philosophises about the abstract while never losing sight of the commonplace. The ordinary is made extraordinary here and both language and the possibility of the text on a page are pushed to the same edges that the "Voice" inhabits. All human experience is being connected here from the mundane to the intensely spiritual and is further connected to the place it inhabits. The act of writing places the experience. Hool’s use of language, of poetry, conjures experience into being and it takes its place alongside everything else in the world of living things. And that is perhaps the important aspect of this writing, that it feels alive on the page. Alicia Stubbersfield on Voice from a Correspondent
This book does connect. Hool’s work however is elliptical. There is space in terms of layout and in omission of many words e.g. the definite and indefinite article; and in the way the poet refuses to over explain. In the majority of the poems however, space is used with mastery; form and meaning doing a type of tango together for the reader’s delight. Hool gives his reader something to do. The finest of all for me is Hool’s sequence, "Episodes from St. David’s". Here tantalising snippets of map are reproduced that read with the text, sounding key words and giving a powerful sense of longing and place. Each poem in the sequence has its individual nature and evokes the different moods of an area I know well. The repetition in my favourite of the poems, "A Song" is truly haunting, beating on the reader like sea does a place. "In the Grace of a Letter" he writes -: "like a swallow this is not my element / but poetry attends / to the state of things" and after spending time with Hool’s collection I feel, not only hungry for more but that as a reader I have been truly attended to. New Welsh Review on Voice from a Correspondent
by Ric Hool The Collective Press isbn 1 899449 70 1 Hool has been around in south Wales for a time, at the edges of things, vaguely MacSweeney-esque, reticent, but this time he’s pushed himself right into the centre. Highlight is "Thirteen of Lindisfarne", a celebration of the place and its magic... If you only try one new poet from Wales this year make it Hool. Peter Finch in Planet (The Welsh Internationalist) on The Bridge
Thank goodness for genuine poetry ... Ric Hool with The Bridge. Ric Hool, a native of Tyneside, is a traveller in love with language, whose poems are enriched with nuggets (shuckle, planish, slidder...) from the Northumbrian word-hoard. There’s an infectious enthusiasm for places, people, experiences and the possibilities of words. ... the symmetrical curves of the text in the sequence ’Thirteen of Lindisfarne’ successfully draw the eye to the rhythms of the sea. In this sequence the writing is spare and windswept, yet wonderfully tactile: a gull is "wing-stiff on a mattress of air" ; surf hisses "its greedy tongue / up & down / wet openings ; grass is "stroked like fur to the nap of the foreshore". Poem 7 is in Northumbrian dialect, and tells a modern sea-serpent tale with relish - we can almost taste the words (heyem - home; yellhouse - aleouse). Other memorable poems are ’Urban Walking’ and ‘Millennium Statement’, set in the south Wales Valleys; ‘Plea to a Wanton Muse...’, humorous and poignant with some delectable language; and ‘Opthalmic Appointment’ with its great ending: "The regular air / breathed from his nostrils, past my lips - sure / so close, he could kiss my gently tilted face." Hilary Llewellyn-Williams in Poetry Wales on The Bridge
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