PENning The Warming World

‘PENning The Warming World’

We are happy to announce the third issue of New Writing, PENning The Warming World. As we did last time we give a brief editorial report on the submissions and the thinking behind our final selection.

This issue's theme, though highly topical, elicited fewer submissions than previous themes, nearly all of them poems. It proved a difficult theme to tackle. Some good pieces were rejected on the grounds that the theme was not obviously central to their meaning; some may feel that that can be said of one or two pieces that have been included and we must admit to a degree of subjectivity in the selection.

When compiling a magazine, regard must be had to how the pieces play off against each other and to the overall effect. Because of the scarcity of prose submissions we could not aim for a balance between poetry and prose, but we have aimed, as always, for a variety of approach. A few lighter pieces have been included to offset the general (and natural) sombreness of tone.

As we said in our previous report, the magazine's distinctive feature is to display the work of refugees and asylum seekers who may not in all cases be professional writers or indeed writers at all. We repeat that this is an opportunity for their voices to be heard, urgent voices from experiences we can only guess at. That is why we give priority to their work.

For this issue we are pleased to be able to feature, as a contribution to International PEN's Americas campaign, an article by Tony Cohan, Chair of the Freedom To Write Committee of San Miguel PEN on the grave dangers to journalists in Mexico. We were put in touch with Tony by Lucy Popescu, of English PEN, and an article by her on the same theme is simultaneously featured on the WiP pages.

We hope you enjoy reading our selection and will consider sending in submissions for our next issue, due out in May. The theme is PENning Journeys and the deadline is 19 April 2010. See the Call For Submissions news entry for more details.

Editorial Board
Anne Clarke, Linda Cracknell, Lindsey Fraser, Fiona Graham

09/02/10

The Americas Campaign: Perils and Potential by Tony Cohan

Featured Writer

Tony Cohan is the Chair of San Miguel PEN's Freedom to Write Committee. We are delighted to welcome him to our featured writer spot for this issue of New Writing, as a contribution to International PEN's Americas campaign. A parallel article by Lucy Popescu on the dangers to journalists in Mexico is featured on the Writers in Prison home page.

The Americas Campaign: Perils and Potential

In 2008, at a PEN conference in Bogota, Colombia, a campaign was planned and launched, focusing on the difficult situation many writers face in the Latin American countries. For those of us in Mexico, the situation bore great urgency, as drug wars, alongside endemic corruption and lawlessness in some quarters, has turned Mexico into one of the most dangerous countries in the world to work as a journalist.

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09/02/10

Jökulsárlón by Ian Crockatt

Ian Crockatt, a member of Scottish PEN, lives in North Aberdeenshire, and has published a number of collections of poetry.

Jökulsárlón

They wake and uncurl
in the yellow yolk
of their tent. Lazily she unzips
its shuddering brown shell.

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09/02/10

Deforestation by Bashabi Fraser

Bashabi Fraser, a PEN member, is a poet, children's writer, editor, translator and academic. Her recent books include From the Ganga to the Tay, an epic poem ( Edinburgh: Luath Press, 2009), Bengal Partition Stories: An Unclosed Chapter, A Meeting of Two Minds: the Geddes Tagore Letters and Tartan & Turban (a collection of poems). Bashabi is a Lecturer in English and Creative Writing at Edinburgh Napier University.

Deforestation

If you enter my depths, and open your senses like petals to the sun, you will hear my voice, calling out to you to listen and be compelled!

When you walk beneath my boughs
They make a canopy above your gaze -
So intricate that the sky appears in glimpses

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09/02/10

Memories of Snow by Alan Gay

Alan Gay: Identification Large and angular with ferocious expression. Tends to be a solitary bird. Voice Still searching. Sometimes heard uttering crow-like guttural calls rather like laughter. Breeding All year round. Mates for life. Average of three offspring. Habitat East coast, forests, cliffs and open country. Migratory. In summer often seen far out at sea. In winter perches in bars and haunts poetry readings with notebook. Food Irony.

Memories of Snow

The heat in Bearsden drove us north
in a stolen TESCO juggernaut
complete with walk-in, diesel-driven fridge:

chasing memories of glens
that danced at the slightest shift of light;

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08/02/10

Where Is The Warming? by Tendai Huchu

Tendai Huchu was born in Bindura a small mining town north of Harare and came to Scotland in 2005 to study.

Where Is The Warming?

Leaders in Copenhagen
trying to save Eden
Gas guzzling Texans

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08/02/10

Arazeel Rains by Kusay Hussein with Sue Reid Sexton

Kusay Hussein is from Baghdad, Iraq. As a fully qualified civil engineer he worked for the American and British authorities building hospitals and schools for the Iraqi people until the security situation became such that he had to seek asylum in Britain where he has recently been given leave to stay indefinitely. He has published many short stories in Iraqi magazines.

'Arazeel Rains' is a collaboration between Kusay Hussein and Sue Reid Sexton. Kusay writes his stories in the best English he can and Sue edits and polishes them up.

Sue Reid Sexton lives and works in Glasgow. She worked as a counsellor specialising in trauma for over a decade and spent another decade working with homelessness. She is the author of four novels including two examining the effects of war on ordinary people and another about complicated grief. She has been published in a variety of forms.

Arazeel Rains

This is absolute hell, shouted Hajj Salem, the foreman, as he glanced over the half wall, that ran round the roof, and out along the road.
I looked at the heavy black smoke rising from the little old concrete mixer we had placed on the roof of the house, then the first floor, in the midst of sand, cement and heaps of gravel. Its sound was deafening.
 

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08/02/10

Tightrope Walker by Mary McCabe

Mary McCabe, a PEN member, has published Everwinding Times (novel), Streets Schemes and Stages (book on cultural projects), Die zauberhafte Reise (children's storybook in translation) and has had radio plays broadcast in Germany and Switzerland, stories, poems and articles in Scots, English and Gaelic. Through the Scottish Book Trust scheme she runs occasional writers' workshops.

Tightrope Walker

Witchy, pitchy, inky black, icy sable
Death. Death. Death.
Eris, infinitesimal, eerie
Pluto, planetesimal, bleary
Gloomy goblin Neptune,

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08/02/10

The Tree That Died by Manjula Parekh

Manjula Parekh was born in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania in 1940 and came to Edinburgh in 1968 to work as a radiographer. She has received the Millennium Fellowship Award and attended the creative writing course at Edinburgh University. She writes in Gujarati, Hindi and English. In recent years, she has developed her interest in watercolour, acrylic, silk and oil painting. She has arranged exhibitions of her work to raise funds for Alzheimer Scotland, Buddhist monastery, Equality Choice Action Group and Tsunami. Her first book of stories with illustrations of many of her paintings and drawings called Edinburgh Fables was published in 2001. 'The Tree That Died' has been edited by Fiona Graham.

The Tree That Died

This is the picture of a tree that looks like a winter tree. It is a beautiful tree. What do you see in this tree? It has calmness, serenity, winter and beauty. But will this tree flourish when the spring comes? Will it start giving flowers and fruits in the summer? Will it be beautiful when it has no greenery? Will the birds start nesting in it and will the tree become lively again? Will animals and human beings take shelter under this tree?

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08/02/10

Carbon Trading by Tessa Ransford

Tessa Ransford is past president and committee member of Scottish PEN. She is an established poet, translator, editor and cultural activist on many fronts over the last thirty years and the initiator of www.scottish-pamphlet-poetry.com and the Callum Macdonald Memorial award for poetry pamphlets. She has recently been Royal Literary Fund fellow at Queen Margaret University. Her latest book is Not Just Moonshine, New and Selected Poems, from Luath Press, Edinburgh. 'Carbon Trading' was first published in Shades of Green, Akros 2005 and has also appeared in Not Just Moonshine.

Carbon Trading

I pollute you pollute he/she/it pollutes
we pollute you all pollute they pollute
in the present tense day after day
and in the past I have polluted
you have he/she/it has you all have and
they have polluted

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08/02/10

S2 Environmental Studies by Valerie Thornton

Valerie Thornton writes poetry, short stories and creative writing textbooks. She has held two Royal Literary Fund Writing Fellowships at Glasgow University. Her tutoring embraces mainstream and specialist groups, school teachers and the OU. Her latest creative-writing textbooks are The Writer's Craft, and The Young Writer's Craft (Hodder Gibson). Her poetry collection is Catacoustics (Mariscat Press).

S2 Environmental Studies


We're talking puffins and terns
and the Braer and the oil
and the sandeels, but that threat
was then, when they were two:

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