A book review of Jamrach’s Menagerie by Carol Birch

This is the first book I’ve bought in ages, and it was recommended to me by Michelle Kane on Twitter. I really liked it, but I wasn’t expecting the ending. I’m not sure what I was expecting or should have been expecting!

It’s one of those poetic books where you just sit there savouring the language and marvelling at so much texture in so little space. It starts off in a rich and evocative London, vaguely smelling of Dickens, and ends up…

I must confess to have been pretty stuck on reading feel-good books of late, and not finishing anything with an edge, but I’m pleased to have this on my overflowing bookshelves.

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A newer poem

At some point I am going to have to start writing again properly, but it’s been a long time. Anyway, here’s another of my old ones from the past 13 years or so (c) Becky Deans

After

We lay on the bed like cold cutlery,

Jumbled up, shiny with anger, not touching

You were all sharp edges, hurt feelings. I was cowered,

Like a spoon staring into itself, seeing a horror.

A fork with its prongs all bent, not even able to be sharp to itself.

You bit a serrated tooth of guilt into me. Tried to

Twist it. Like a knife through butter all the strength I had built up

Slipped away from me.

 

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Because you should always write about what you know…

Anyway, enough of the men, and I’m just putting these poems on because they did the rounds another lifetime ago. I’m only sharing the ones that stick with me, mind. Here’s one about biscuits, a safer subject than men.

Rich Tea

We sat like dumplings mulling over

Lack fun lives and soap opera,

Watching coffee levels drop

Wanting fags from the Union shop

And you called life a biscuit tin

That you get out what you put in.

Maybe tasty round and sweet –

We’re philosophical when we meet –

To dunk in cocoa or to crunch

A neat quick snack to spoil your lunch

Satisfying in excess

We resolved to eat them less.

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Photo Opportunity

Of course, one of the hundred and one things I shouldn’t say to a man or anyone is I wrote a poem about you, but it’s said now, so here goes. From 1994 (c) Becky Deans

Photo Opportunity

 

It should have been romantic

On the dark rocks, in the full moonlight

Seeing shooting stars and wishing eternity.

The rocks shimmered like salt

Frosty, and the chill enveloped us both

I hope the picture you took of me

Haunts you

Like a dead child

 

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Lyrical

All poems (c) Becky Deans.

I wrote these when I was 19 and edited them just now.

Trial

If I lost my mind in a labyrinth

Would you come to find me?

If I tied my life in spiderwebs

could you still unwind me?

If I broadcast abstract characters

how would you decode me?

And if I let down all my barriers

how could you erode me?

When did you stop learning baby?

When they told you off at school?

When they told you kids should mess?

When they told you that you’re thick?

When they made you wear that dress?

When the lads forgot their work,

took up studying your chest?

When you worked out it’s not cool?

When they made you wear that dress?

When you won a full-time post

As Assistant Manageress

but they made you make the tea?

When they made you wear that dress?

When you drank yourself again

to a state of helplessness?

When your period was late?

When they made you wear that dress?

When you gave it up for love?

When your house was in a mess?

When he only hit you once?

When your baby wore a dress?

Anytime

i am

a mat in the hall

you can wipe your shit on me

anytime

i am

a sack full of straw

you can practise punches on me

anytime

i am

a tramp from the street

you can steal some food from me

anytime

i am

a hole in the earth

you can put your finger in me

anytime

Yesterday

I think we realised

yesterday doesn’t exist

We stream out clean again each morn.

I think we realised

yesterday is meaningless.

You walk away from me

untorn.

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She asked

She asked if she might sleep a while

On the harsh slate floor

And lay as cool as milk

Thin as gauze

We quietly watched, put some more logs on the fire.

Her opalescent skin

Took all the corners of the room in. Refracted in her mother of pearl world

Stubborn oak beams become slender columns of light.

Handmade candles, chandeliers.

Her light butterfly breathing

Soothed callouses, filled hunger.

I did as I was told

And gathered the cobweb creature in my arms

Led her to my bed.

I half expected her to be gone

In the morning, desiccated by light.

© Becky Deans

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Make Sure You Have One

 Hello world

International copyright remains with the individual author, ie Becky Deans and any similarities to any people or organisations living or dead is just one of those bizarre coincidences! Enjoy! This is the only short story I wrote in my married phase (I think) and uses the same characters as the novel published in Magpie (2000).

Make Sure You Have One

It was eight o’clock.  If Simon had had a shave while Sarah was cooking breakfast.  Hell, if Sarah had let him have a shave while she had gone to the trouble of cooking breakfast, things would have been better.  They were now stuck in a queue outside Bardill’s Island that stretched from junction 25 of the M1. Simon reckoned there was at least three miles of queuing to go and who knows how long that would take.

Simon rubbed his face, his freshly shaved follicles still bristling slightly.  He was a hairy man.  Sarah scrutinised him, annoyed by the scratching, like nails on sandpaper.  Even if he was doing it without meaning it, he was winding her up.  She felt he was drawing her attention to his shave, to the fact he had to help with breakfast.

But why should she cook while he shaved? She couldn’t see why she should be fulfilling the working class role of woman-who-gets-up-early-to-feed-her-man, while he set about preening.  That was the kind of thing her grandma used to do.  Didn’t she deserve time for herself before work? It was all she could do to put mascara on these days before she was shooed out of the house.

They went this early to avoid the traffic.  Which traffic they were actually avoiding escaped Sarah’s attention, stuck as they were behind the whole of a car dealership’s forecourt, lights gleaming like rubies, exhausts smoking like factories.  Apparently, they were avoiding the real peak flow that rolled out of their drives at eight thirty to try to reach Nottingham by nine-ish. Those who had to queue at Bardill’s roundabout even further back than the M1 junction.

After seven-thirty, every ten minutes they started late added another twenty to the journey.  It had all been much worse since the railways had started playing up. The car purred along with throaty male aggression.

Sarah tried to listen to Radio One and remember who she was.  ‘One love, one life, make sure you have one.’ She was young. This was a stopgap. She checked her makeup in the sun visor mirror and sang along to All Saints.  She tried to forget she was even in a car.

‘Do you have to?’ Simon turned the radio off. Suddenly the engine noise seemed to engulf the whole car.  Sarah carried on singing at the top of her voice.

‘Stop it.  You look like a loony.  What do you think people at work are going to say with me with a loony in my car.  This is not a disco. And anyway, you’re out of tune.’

‘How would you know?  You can’t even play the recorder.’ Sarah sneered at him and carried on singing. She could drown out the engine noise and the sound of Simon scratching his face, even the work she was going to, by singing.  Sarah knew she was a good singer. Her piano teacher once suggested she sing on one of his dance tracks when he got his dance tracks ready. Her Mum said she was better than the Spice Girls.  She put the radio back on.

‘I wouldn’t wanna be anywhere else but here. Wouldn’t want to change anything at all.  Anything, oh why.’

It was a job she never wanted to go to in the first place.  She didn’t start until 9.15 either.  They were now in the right hand lane about three cars from the island.  They had been queuing for five minutes and Simon said the engine temperature was rising.

‘Perhaps we won’t get there,’ Sarah said breaking off her song.

‘Don’t sound so happy about that. I’ve got a presentation at nine and I’ve got some preparation to do before that.  This car has always been so reliable.’  He gritted his teeth and prepared to go onto the roundabout. They were going straight on.  A rusty Volvo from the junction they were passing pulled in front and nearly went into the side of them as they went left onto the A52 and he went right on to Toton.  ‘Bloody weekend drivers.’

‘Calm down.’

Simon’s mutterings gave her inner dread.  When they first got together, she thought she was going out with somebody reasonable and cool but now she was beginning to wonder if every man turned into their cardigan-wearing Dad about the age of thirty.  Too much time talking about taxes, too many bank accounts, too many banks and all too much television.  Soon watching the television and sitting in traffic jams would be all Sarah did outside of work.

Simon continued to stare at the dials in front of him, then creep forward a little, then stare at the dials some more, then stare at the traffic.  His eyes stared intently as if the road had good calves or an excellent pair of tits.

‘We don’t have sex anymore.’

Simon carried on looking straight ahead.  Anticipating the road. It was as if he hadn’t heard her.

‘We don’t do it.  What happened?’

Sarah watched a grey Mondeo change from the right-hand lane to the left and a black Mercedes go from the left to the right. This ballet of the road caused Simon to break twice, curse twice.

‘It’s idiots like these who make the damn things slower.  Why can’t people just get into the right lane?’  He banged his fist on the steering wheel then looked right at her, pitifully. ‘What’s happened to this country?’

He looked so weak. So feeble. So much like he needed her.  It was dangerous.

‘Keep your eye on the road if you are not going to pay attention to me.’  He put his hand on her thigh, like he used to all the time when they first went out. They used to like driving along like this, still connected. Sarah stroked his face.  It bristled. They started to progress at normal speed again.

She had to give him his hand back as they approached another queue. It was road works at Bramcote Island. They chugged along in the left hand lane. Sarah started to rap along to Eminem. Simon didn’t seem to hear.

Simon kept staring at the dashboard. They were only going 20 mph.  Sarah started to sing along to Madonna. Simon didn’t.

‘Is the car all right?’ She thought she’d better sound interested. The car always was all right. In a way, it was the one constant thing in her life. It wasn’t hers and she didn’t own any part of it.

‘The red light’s flashing.’

‘What does that mean?’

‘I’m not one hundred percent sure.  I think it means we’re overheating.’ Sarah put her face next to his to look. ‘Careful,’ Simon said.

‘You think.’ Sarah turned the radio off. ‘What do we need to do?’

‘We don’t need to be in this queue.  It will only make it worse.’

They were ten cars behind the traffic lights, where they would turn left and go down a rat run that normally didn’t clog up. They couldn’t afford to crawl along for much longer.  Simon turned off the engine.

‘Will that help?’

‘It can’t get any hotter.’  The traffic lights changed and he had to move again and switched the engine back up again. The red light flashed again.

‘Should we go home?’

‘I’ve still got work to do. I’ll need to take it to the garage.  Fuck, I can’t afford the time off.  What am I going to do?’ Sarah noticed drops of sweat on his face.

She took a tissue and wiped his face. ‘We’ll sort it out.’ They were half way around the roundabout now. Suddenly a siren started. ‘Is that the car?’

It was an ambulance coming up behind them.

‘God, this is all we need. And it can’t get past.  It will have to go behind us. We can’t afford to stop anymore.’

Now there were two flashing lights in the car, the ambulance aching to get past, and the engine aching to cool. Was five pounds an hour worth it? Sarah’s head hurt.

They started up again and Simon turned left into Bramcote village, praying there wouldn’t be any more interruptions to their journey.  The ambulance pulled past them and down to the left, to the A52.

‘Accident on the M1, I suppose.’

He shrugged. It was commonplace.

‘They didn’t have to wait long, did they? No.’ She paused. ‘How is the car?’

‘It’s holding it’s own, just about, I s’pose. I just hope it gets us to work.’ Simon rubbed his face again. Now she knew it wasn’t aimed at her. His face was red where he’d rubbed it.  She stroked it. ‘I’m trying to concentrate.’

‘Sorry.’

She thought she went to work because she needed the money but if she really thought about it she wondered what the hell she was doing.  Simon earned three times more than her. He let her keep her money; she didn’t contribute to the house; it was a stopgap until she sorted herself out. Pretty long stopgap; Sarah thought at some point she would have to concede that her administration job was all she was going to get.  She’d been trying so long to get out of all that. She was a graduate. She had a brain. So had so many other people like her.  As her grandma would say, ‘life’s hectic if you don’t weaken’.

All around her the arteries of the city clogged to a slow funereal procession, the light on the dashboard flashed and Simon swore.  She turned the radio all the way up and didn’t stop singing until they were in car park B.

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Salut!

Hi world and all that

Get a bit fed up of reading everyone else’s poems, so here’s one of mine.

Untitled

How come

It’s easier to express

When you’re milking me?

best wishes

(c) Becky Deans

Of course, if it was untitled and un-sung, it would be a song by Tanya Donelly!

 

 

 

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