Fotografía de autor
12+ Obras 87 Miembros 3 Reseñas

Obras de Cherry Smyth

Obras relacionadas

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The Anchor Book of New Irish Writing (2000) — Contribuidor — 39 copias
Diva Book of Short Stories (2000) — Contribuidor — 32 copias
Necrologue: The Diva Book of the Dead and the Undead (2003) — Contribuidor — 25 copias
Groundswell: The Second Diva Book of Short Stories (2002) — Contribuidor — 16 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Género
female
Nacionalidad
Ireland
Lugares de residencia
Ballymoney, County Antrim, Ireland (birthplace)
Ocupaciones
poet
teacher
Organizaciones
University of Greenwich

Miembros

Reseñas

“The road removes us.
The river invites us back
to time’s deep body.”

Make it a mini-string in my reading now of books showing us the wandering mind, displaying the associations and memories it dredges up from that bottomless disembodied consciousness that flows, rises, and dips within us, somehow contained within the banks of our lobes, in dialogue with external stimuli.

[b:Two Sherpas|64645422|Two Sherpas|Sebastián Martínez Daniell|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1670514875l/64645422._SY75_.jpg|65632560] did so through fiction; If the River is Hidden does so through travelogue and poetry. While this is a physical journey for the authors along the course of the River Bann, in the written word it is a mental journey that rewards a willingness to relax into language and follow the wandering course that presents itself.

Reportage and pedestrian facts are disempowered. Of Portadown, generally known for being the site of the most contentious of the yearly Orange Order provocations, it is merely written that “there’s something here that feels different. It feels, well, Portadown.” Not enlightening from an information-seeking point of view, but redress is offered in the poetic line that Portadown is not dissimilar to other towns “where ugliness and utility share the same toothbrush.”

Poetry and prose are throughout intermingled to produce a lyrical account of the landscape (generally stinking of animal shit) and the mental activity sparked in the two writers, answering affirmatively the question “Can this be an Irish poem?” It is so when in conversation with [b:The Táin: From the Irish Epic Táin Bó Cúailnge|75586|The Táin From the Irish Epic Táin Bó Cúailnge|Anonymous|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1388704820l/75586._SY75_.jpg|1637], noting that “the Pangs of Ulster are different today”, and in noting the mental states of one’s companion, how “he hums the dark hedges inside himself.”

Approaching this work from the proper point of view is important; knowing little about it when I received it as part of my Republic of Consciousness monthly subscription, spurred to read it fairly immediately by my inordinate lifelong interest in the north of Ireland/Northern Ireland, I did not at first and needed to reorient. Having done so, it is a delightful way to pass a bit of time.
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Denunciada
lelandleslie | otra reseña | Feb 24, 2024 |
A River Runs Through Northern Ireland
Review of the époque press paperback edition (November 24, 2022).

He tells her he wants to stick to using physical maps, to enjoy the working out of the path and the working round of the river. To embrace the uncertainty inherent in not having your position geolocated by dozens of satellites in near-earth orbit. Uncertainty, it seems to them both, is key. For why go on a journey of discovery if you both know exactly where you are, know exactly which degrees of longitute and latitude will constitute where you end up?


See photograph at https://www.irishnews.com/picturesarchive/irishnews/irishnews/2021/07/05/1611408...
The co-authors plotting their walking trail on the River Bann. Photograph by Hugh Russell for the Irish News (link below).

If the River is Hidden records a dual memoir in prose and poetry by writers Cherry Smyth and Craig Jordan-Baker of an 8-day trek which they undertook in a journey of discovery of their Northern Irish heritage. Poet and documentarian Smyth left Northern Ireland over 40 years ago (during the Troubles) and has lived and worked out of London ever since. Novelist and educator Jordan-Baker had a grandfather from Northern Ireland who had emigrated as well. I enjoyed Jordan-Baker's novel The Nacullians (2020) several years ago, also through the Republic of Consciousness Book of the Month Club.

The River Bann (the name is derived from the Irish An Bhanna, the Goddess) traverses Northern Ireland from its source in the south-east to its mouth in the north-west and is 89 kilometres long (129 if you count the lake Lough Neagh which splits the journey. The authors crossed the lake in an eel-boat.

This was a lyrical journey where the prose and poetry merged seamlessly to tell the story of both the journey and authors' own pasts and those of their families. Presumably Smyth wrote the poetry and Jordan-Baker the prose, but at time it is certainly Smyth speaking during the prose segments so there is some blurring of the borders.

I enjoyed the book for both its blending of genres and for its method of discovering one's heritage by a physical journey through its landscape.

I read If the River is Hidden as the February 2023 selection from the Republic of Consciousness Book of the Month (BotM) club. Subscriptions to the BotM support the annual Republic of Consciousness Prize for small independent publishers.

Trivia and Links
The co-authors were interviewed by the Irish News during their journey and the article with several photographs by Hugh Russell can be seen here by Claire Simpson, Irish News, July 5, 2021.

Read more about the River Bann on Wikipedia here.
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Denunciada
alanteder | otra reseña | May 22, 2023 |
Hold Still, début novel by art critic and poet Cherry Smyth continues the trend, narrating a significant period in the life of artists’ muse and model Joanna Hiffernan, the woman now widely believed to be the face behind Gustave Courbet’s controversial painting; L’Origine du monde (soon to be displayed in the Relish en-suite bathroom if I can find a nice frame!) Charting her relationship with temperamental American artist James Whistler, her blossoming one with the tremendous Courbet and the general pitfalls, hopes and dreams of being an artists’ muse, a Victorian woman of humble origins and an aspiring artist all in one, this novel lived above and beyond its tantalising blurb and nicely unassuming book jacket to entertain and enlighten me all the way through the gloomy January days.

Flitting between the bohemian, intellectual circles of mid 19th-century Paris and London (a big tick location/time wise for any novel I might care to read), Smyth has harnessed her work as an art critic and curator to lend authenticity and vivacity to this fictionalised account of a remarkable woman’s life, an account that, as far as I can tell, seems as true to the real tale as we could possibly be. Certain moments throughout Jo’s dramatic, romantic tale can seem at odds with the image we have in our mind of a typical Victorian woman; displaying an independence of mind, body and spirit that we admire in our own, 21st-century selves:

‘ She is laughing, her body’s pleasure distilling into clarity and boldness, red as a matador’s cape. This is the fire she has stolen, the trail of bright flame, her own power.’

p.250

18750483Some modern authors may have a tendency to throw our modern attitudes and fancies onto their period characters without much thought. Although still living somewhat on the whims of the men she loves, Jo’s strength, intelligence and modernity seems genuine, a rejection of those ‘real women’ of a Dickensian persuasion who often seem a little too sensitive and fatalistic for their own good. Her modest beginnings could have spelt a very different life for her, much like that of her Bridget. Instead, Smyth has afforded us a glimpse into this woman’s exciting world. A world I wouldn’t really have had a clue about (despite an active interest in art) without reading this wonderfully entertaining novel. Much like Gallic Books, pioneering publishing house Holland Park Press have discovered a real gem in Cherry Smyth. All you lovers of fancy book covers place aside your shallow thoughts aside in favour of content. I promise you won’t be disappointed.
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Denunciada
Lucy_Rock | Mar 12, 2014 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
12
También por
6
Miembros
87
Popularidad
#211,168
Valoración
½ 3.4
Reseñas
3
ISBNs
12

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