Dear Heart: 150 New Zealand Love Poems ed by Paula Green
Godwit $36.99
Paula Green's new anthology of love poems is not the first in the field. Gregory O'Brien and Jenny Bornholdt edited a much smaller selection, My Heart Goes Swimming (also published by Godwit), in 1996 and Lauris Edmond put together a collection (published posthumously) in 2000 similar in size to the Green collection.
Dear Heart takes its title from a poem by Michele Leggott addressed to her dead mother and is a pointer to what makes Green's collection different from its predecessors. Not all the poems she chooses are about sexual love; she also includes poems about love for a child (Janet Charman's warm loaf, Mary Stanley's Puer Natus), a grandchild (Elizabeth Smither's Ruby's heirloom dress), a mother (Leggott's Dear Heart, Albert Wendt's My Mother Dances), a father (Jeffrey Paparoa Holman's As big as a father), a place (Airini Beautrais' Love Poem for the Tauherenikau River, Peter Bland's The gift), the past (Brian Turner's Remembering Summer), even, of all things, a bike (James Brown's The Bicycle). In this book, "love" is defined by the lover's feelings not by the nature of the love-object.
The title, Dear Heart, operates in another way, too. Nine artists were commissioned to produce an art work illustrating one letter each of the title phrase. These works are distributed through the book and used on the dust jacket. So, "d" is done by Gregory O'Brien, "e" by Joanna Pegler, "a" by Emily Wolfe, "r" by Reuben Patterson, and so on.
Other artists involved are Dick Frizzell, Sam Mitchell, John Pule, John Reynolds and Michael Hight; the last-named also provided elegant end-papers and cover art, that is, the cover you see when you take the dust jacket off. The presence of these colourful and various images makes for a most attractive book. Credit should also go to the designer, Megan van Staden.