Tag: poems by Indrani Perera

  • Haiku in the Hills

    IP - Haiku in the Hills 1

    IP - Haiku in the Hills 2

    Back in August as part of the Sonic Poetry Festival, I attended the Haiku in the Hills poetry workshop facilitated by AJ D’Costa. We met AJ in the Dandenong Botanic Gardens on a crisp winter morning. Luckily for us, the heavens didn’t open as AJ guided us through the gardens, teaching us about haiku and giving us time to write poems. We ended the walk with a delicious picnic on the grass that AJ had packed and carried for us throughout the walk. It was a lovely morning and a beautiful way to experience poetry in collaboration with and connection to landscape and nature.

    IP - Haiku in the Hills 3

    After the workshop, AJ gathered our poems and put them into this gorgeous zine. I don’t often write haiku so it was wonderful to have a poem included in this collection. One that I am sure I couldn’t have written without AJ’s expert guidance. Thanks AJ for a fabulous poetry workshop and this amazing souvenir of a wonderful morning!

     

  • Have a Little Faith

    IP - Have a Little Faith 1It's been a strange kind of year. I haven't really felt like I've found my groove yet. And it's November already!

    Things haven't been helped by all the boxes still loitering in the laundry and hallway from our move late last year. And of course learning that we have to move again really threw a spanner in the works.

    But.

    IP - Have a Little Faith 2

    There is a but. A silver lining. And that is opening my inbox this morning after a week wrestling with said boxes (I am determined to unpack everything and throw out the stuff we don't need before we have to move again) to discover that I was longlisted for the 2024 Frontier Open Poetry Prize.

    Me!

    Longlisted for an international poetry prize!!

    Maybe I will keep on writing after all 🙂

     

  • Being

    IP - Being

    Late last year I had not one, but two poems, long listed for the University of Canberra Vice-Chancellor's International Poetry Prize! It was a huge honour to have my work recognised by the judges.

    Landline is a poem about old friends who you've know forever but hardly find the time to see any more. Life has moved you in different directions and you may not even live in the same city. But there's always the phone.

    Much to my amazement, the second poem, Notes From the Diaspora on Returning 'Home', ended up being shortlisted! I wrote this poem while I was traveling in Sri Lanka with my partner, daughters and parents. It was an incredible experience to hear my father telling us all stories about his childhood in the places where they happened. And at that same time feel a disconnection from a place that should be more familiar than it is.

    If you'd like to read my poems you can now buy this wonderful anthology where you'll also find the winning poem and other amazing poems fro the competition. This is an anthology to treasure and read again and again.

    Huge thanks to the University of Canberra for including my poems and recognising my work.

     

  • Heroine’s Anthology Shortlist

    Heroine's Anthology Shortlist

    My poem, pathika, has been shortlisted for the Heroine's Anthology Prize which means it will now appear in the forthcoming Heroine's Anthology of poems from around the world.

    I am so excited to be included in this global edition of poetry about amazing women from throughout Herstory, I can't wait to see who I will meet in its pages!

     

  • Heroine’s Anthology Longlist

    Heroine's Anthology Logo

    Herstory is a topic very dear to my heart. I am always looking for females voices, especially those that have been hidden or erased from the offical versions of accounts. I want to know about the stories of women who shaped past events. I want to hear about their ingenuity and inventions. I want to know what they were like, where they lived and who they loved. I want to look at the stories we tell ourselves about the world and I want to see myself reflected within its annals.

    I guess I've always been feminist in this regard but my quest for women's tales only grew stronger once I had two daughters. I wanted to share with them stories about the world that told them they could do anything that they set their minds and hearts to doing. If you're on this quest as well. I'd highly recommend the Goodnight Stories for Rebel Girls series of books and the Little People Big Dreams picture book biographies about prominent female figures. Princess Smartypants is a wonderful picture book for young girls about a. sassy Princess who does not want to get married – she's too busy doing other things!

    All of this is to say that I am beyond thrilled to announce that my poem, pathika, has been longlisted for the Heroines Anthology Global edition Prize. 

    Pathika is about the lives and poetry of three famous Indian poets. These women are well known in India but not as familiar to most readers in the west. Being from South Asia, I wanted my poem to reflect my heritage. No Greek goddesses for me! I was originally wanting to write a poem about female poets from Sri Lanka but they were quite hard to find given that I don't speak Sinhala or Tamil. So I looked to our neighbours for inspiration and found a whole wealth of material.

    Big thanks to the Heroine's Anthology for choosing my poem!

     

     

  • Finding My Feet

    IP - Finding My Feet (INVITATION TO BOOK LAUNCH 12-02-2024)

    Melbourne Poets Union have been around for what feels like forever and they do amazing work to promote poetry and support poets in Melbourne and its surrounds. Last night I attended the launch of their brand new anthology, Finding My Feet. It features poems from some of Australia's most well known poets. And me! It's a huge honour to be included in this magnificent publication.

    IP - Finding My Feet

    The editors selected two of my poems, Seagrass Meadow and no good at sport, to appear in this excellent anthology.

    This extensive collection of poems feels like a wonderful representation of contemporary poets from around Australia. It's well worth buying if you'd like to know more about the current Australian poetry scene.

     

  • Places You’ll Never Go and Things You Won’t See

    Kalliope X Logo

    Any journal, especially an Australian one that is open to or dedicated to publishing poetry in languages other than English has my wholehearted support. English is not the only language and the more we learn from each other the better. We are a multicultural society with a majority of Australians being born overseas or having a parent who was born overseas. As such, our literary landscape needs to reflect our cultural diversity.

    So when I come across a fabulous journal like Kalliope X, I devour its contents and then start submitting my work. I am so honoured to have my poem, Places You'll Never Go and Things You Won't See in issue 5 of this fabulous digital publication. Thank you to the editors for selecting my work.

     

  • Migration

    Science Write Now Issue ImageI am pleased to announce that the digital journal, Science Write Now, has published two of my poems in Issue 9: Migration.

    Light Years is a poem about the migration of light from our distant sun to our home planet. In writing this poem I was imagining what it might be like to be a particle undertaking that epic journey. What could happen to it along the way?

    Yesterday is Today: the Migration of Memory looks at a different sort of migration  - that of thoughts and their journeys through our minds. It is a very different sort of poem to Light Years as it ponders what happens to us as we age and our memories start to fade.

     

  • Shortlisted for the University of Canberra Vice Chancellor’s International Poetry Prize

    IP - Shortlisted for the University of Canberra Vice Chancellor's International Poetry Prize

    I am now officially one step closer to winning a poetry prize! I had two poems longlisted for the University of Canberra Vice Chancellor's International Poetry Prize and Landline has just been shortlisted!

    Can you believe the company I'm keeping these days? Talking about rubbing shoulders with giants!

     

  • The Vice-Chancellor’s Poetry Longlist

    IP - The Vice-Chancellor's Poetry Longlist

    I had just decided to stopped entering poetry competitions. It's expensive and demoralising. I figured that my poetry (still) wasn't good enough to be at prize winning standard and I should stop throwing good money away after bad and instead spend it on something better like, oh I don't know, more matcha lattes. At least then I'd have a nice a nice experience to show for my expenditure.

    In physical sports like tennis there's a clear set of rules, an umpire to make decisions and immediate feedback on your actions. Plus all the adoring fans and sponsorship money. Unlike poetry on the other hand where you write a poem, show it to some friends who muter encouraging words so you decide to pay money and enter it into a competition and then wait to hear that someone else has won.

    Entering poetry competitions is a gamble. Not surprising really when you rethink about the number of poets (thousands for some of the major prizes) who enter these competitions for the very few prizes on offer – usually a first and perhaps a second prize and that's it. Standing out from the crowd is next to impossible, or so I thought.

    IP - The Vice Chancellor's Poetry Longlist

    It's funny how the world works isn't it? Not very long after making the decision to stop entering poetry competitions (bythrowing up my hands in the air and saying, 'I quit!'),  I came across an email in my inbox telling me I had been longlisted for the University of Canberra Vice-Chancellor's International Poetry Prize. Even though I had quit, there were still some irons in the fire so to speak from competitions I had already entered when I was in in a more optimistic frame of mind. 

    Not only was I longlisted for this prize, I was longlisted twice! The poems the judges selected were Landline which I wrote when I did Andy Jackson's poetry workshop last year and Notes From the Diaspora which was written earlier this year after I returned from my holiday in Sri Lanka. One of the judges is the Indian poet Mani Rao. I fell in love with her poetry and her voice where I heard her read in Canberra at the Poetry on the Move festival a few years ago. Having her choose my poems for the longlist feels like a huge honour. 

    I was chuffed! I have never been longlisted before and never considered for a prize of this stature. This prize is a big deal and there are a lot of poets I look up to and admire on the longlist including Shastra Deo, Coral Carter, Es Fong, Damen O'Brien and Sara M Saleh. Plus many more I am keen to read when the anthology comes out next year.

    Look at the company I am keeping, people, just look! Maybe, just maybe, I can write poetry that connects with people, that transcends, that rises, after all!