A brilliant collection from the Scottish Makar, as you would expect, with affecting and powerful poems on life, grief, identity, time, and making sense of the connections and divisions between us. Challenges othering of people by social class/identity in several ways, notably drawing attention to the experience of ethnic minorities and refugees, while remaining heartfelt and personal, presenting the depth of experiences that are felt by a person. Poems are in both English, Scots, and a combination of the two.
Some notable poems worth a read include the elegiac and moving "Lines From Kilmarnock", plithy "Bantam", "Small" (one of my favourites, emotionally wrought and true), the centrepiece "Threshold" (not least for its many references, incorporations of about 40 languages, and commentary on contemporary Scotland), the particularly intertextual "Silver Moon", "Planet Farage" (sardonic, tongue and cheek), and "Constant".
Here's one of my favourites, which reminds me of Hugh MacDiarmid's intimate poems like "Empty Vessel" (who features as an epigraph, alongside Zora Neale Hurston, Rupert Brooke, and Nan Shepherd), and I have just learned was commissioned to be included to the baby box for newborns in Scotland (modelled after Finland):
"O ma darlin wee one
At last you are here in the wurld
And wi' aa your wisdom
Your een bricht as the stars,
You've filled this hoose with licht,
Yer trusty wee haun, your globe o' a heid, My cherished yin, my hert's ain!
O ma darlin wee one The hale wurld welcomes ye:
The mune glowes; the hearth wairms.
Let your life hae luck, health, charm,
Ye are my bonny blessed bairn,
My small miraculous gift.
I never kent luve like this."
- Welcome Wee One