THE WRONG JARROW Reviews
The Wrong Jarrow: Tom Kelly
Jarrow was once called The Town That Was Murdered. It is still a painful site of popular memory, a shameful emblem of industrial decay and deprivation, immortalised by grainy newsreels, the photographs of Bill Brandt and the speeches of Ellen Wilkinson. Tom Kelly has lived in Jarrow for most of his life, but he sometimes feels as though he is living in the wrong Jarrow, as though the ghosts of the past cannot leave the place.
The Wrong Jarrow brings together poems from Tom Kelly’s previous books, Their Lives, The Picture from Here, That Time of Life and John Donne in Jarrow as well as new work. It is a clear-eyed picture of the North East today, where deprivation and unemployment are supposedly a distant memory. It also includes a sequence of poems inspired by the paintings of Norman Cornish, charting the life and times of a working class community, something this collection achieves with passion and honesty.
“there’s heartache and pain within these short, plainly-written poems”
Ambit
“Kelly writes with an uncomfortable rawness and directness. Not to do so would also be a betrayal… The cumulative effect of reading this book is to be exposed to an honesty we are in much need of.”
Matt Simpson, Critical Survey
“Tom Kelly’s gaze is compassionate, steady and unflinching, his tone direct and unsparing, his integrity resonant throughout these poems.”
The Journal
“a forceful little collection, unremitting yet not without a background compassion.”
Other Poetry
“put down with a spareness it is difficult to find these days.”
Barry MacSweeney
“specialises in suburban epiphanies, the lines lying flat, full of grudging northerness.”
Stand
Below taken from a five star review in The Northern Echo
“LARGELY an elegy for the old North- East: the “Right Jarrow”, at least in public perception. Kelly observes
The yard’s
dead, quiet.
Chains no longer
hold onto ships
onto lives.
A poem about Swan Hunter’s notes: The yards are finished.
Kids need to be told where the river is.
A final sequence celebrates the paintings of Norman Cornish, one of which, Two Men at Bar with Dog, graces the cover.”
The Northern Echo
Tom Kelly has written many plays, including The Black Hill at Blaydon, The Machine Gunners, I Left My Home in Roker Park, The Blaydon Bricklayer, Dan Dare: The Musical (with John Miles), Kelly (with Alan Price) and Tom and Catherine, a musical based on the life of Catherine Cookson (also with John Miles). He is a life-long Sunderland supporter and lives very happily with his family and two cats in Blaydon.
The Wrong Jarrow, Tom Kelly
ISBN-13: 978-0-9551061-7-0
Price: £7.95
Order The Wrong Jarrow from Inpress.
http://www.inpressbooks.co.uk/the_wrong_jarrow_kelly_tom_i018344.aspx#
Taken from Smokestack Books site:

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