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y separately published work icon Urban Gleanings selected work   poetry  
Issue Details: First known date: 2017... 2017 Urban Gleanings
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‘In Mark Mahemoff’s Urban Gleanings the routine of the urban commute, punctured by fragile incidents and ruminations, is interspersed with poems drumming against mortality, such as the refugees whose “corpses washed to shore / all in the same boat”. Many poems are shaded by nostalgia and a tinkering unease: an old garage where 'dreams often end up in mothballs', parents and children cagily circling each other, or watching balloons 'disappear into their past'. As well as these segmented descriptions of daily life demarcated by a crowded metropolis, two long centos chronicle some recent Australian injustices.’ - Gig Ryan

Urban Gleanings is an urbane collection that manages to be both sophisticated as verse and open-hearted as poetry. To 'glean' is to seek what is left behind, overlooked, deemed superfluous but which yet sustains the gleaner, who patiently works the fields others have forsaken. In this manner, Mark Mahemoff scrutinises the ground of our living and uncovers what is valuable in it. What we, in our turn, discover is that these poems - these gleanings - are in fact the true harvest itself, its rich abundance laid out before us as his gift.’ - Paul Kane

This book is remarkable for the humanity of its content and austerity of its language. It is a constant going out of itself into the experience of others. Family, friends and strangers are seen for themselves in an effort of sympathy. The style is entirely appropriate to what is said, opening out possibilities from one line to the next. There is a drive to make sense of experience and then offer that as a new experience in the form of poetry. The impulse to remember is richly present. To memorialise the overlooked or unseen is the constant intention. Words pick up words through subtle rhyming and alliteration demonstrating interconnection, the abiding theme. - Robert Gray' (Publication Summary)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

    • Port Adelaide, Port Adelaide - Enfield area, Adelaide - Northwest, Adelaide, South Australia,: Ginninderra Press , 2017 .
      image of person or book cover 1457086601207352174.jpg
      Cover image courtesy of publisher.
      Extent: 88p.
      ISBN: 9781760413293

Works about this Work

Concise, Wittily Memorable & Elegant : Adam Aitken Reviews ‘Urban Gleanings’ by Mark Mahemoff Adam Aitken , 2019 single work review
— Appears in: Rochford Street Review , no. 26 2019;

— Review of Urban Gleanings Mark Mahemoff , 2017 selected work poetry

'Mark Mahemoff’s most recent collection of poems will please a recent critic of Contemporary Australian Poetry, who claimed that there isn’t enough poetry about this city. Mark’s URBAN is my Sydney urban: the train stations are familiar, the aircraft noise, and the people he describes. “This is pure city” he writes, and his poem meticulously distills this quality, which is all out there in the world, but it takes a poet like Mark to find that purity.' (Introduction)

Give or Take a Cluster of Well-placed Words Ali Smith , 2017 single work column
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian , 14 October 2017; (p. 20)

'Sometimes poetry is made of words thought up and strung together. Sometimes it’s made of words found and rearranged: words from other poems, from signage or advertising, from overheard conversation, from novels, magazine articles, from Twitter, from the newspaper. Every kind of literary art and verbal detritus can be reused by poets.' (Introduction)

Concise, Wittily Memorable & Elegant : Adam Aitken Reviews ‘Urban Gleanings’ by Mark Mahemoff Adam Aitken , 2019 single work review
— Appears in: Rochford Street Review , no. 26 2019;

— Review of Urban Gleanings Mark Mahemoff , 2017 selected work poetry

'Mark Mahemoff’s most recent collection of poems will please a recent critic of Contemporary Australian Poetry, who claimed that there isn’t enough poetry about this city. Mark’s URBAN is my Sydney urban: the train stations are familiar, the aircraft noise, and the people he describes. “This is pure city” he writes, and his poem meticulously distills this quality, which is all out there in the world, but it takes a poet like Mark to find that purity.' (Introduction)

Give or Take a Cluster of Well-placed Words Ali Smith , 2017 single work column
— Appears in: The Weekend Australian , 14 October 2017; (p. 20)

'Sometimes poetry is made of words thought up and strung together. Sometimes it’s made of words found and rearranged: words from other poems, from signage or advertising, from overheard conversation, from novels, magazine articles, from Twitter, from the newspaper. Every kind of literary art and verbal detritus can be reused by poets.' (Introduction)

Last amended 2 May 2017 10:15:47
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