Made for Weather
Fetid with winter’s dead leaves,
the soil, as it warms
in spring, elbows out off its bed
the split seed …
Cooke’s theme, like Robin Hyde’s, is one of finding ‘a home in this world’: hers is an authentic poetry of place, with a fidelity to experience comparable to that of other more established poets such as Bernadette Hall or Brian Turner. Poems contain an array of striking images, developed from Cooke’s exposure as a child and adolescent to the wind-whipped coastline of Orepuki, now a ghost town on the eastern fringe of Te Waewae Bay, near Fiordland.
The passing of seasons features in the background of scenes which are dominated by ostensibly contemporary concerns such as a wild and woolly boyfriend, or collecting toheroa. The poet has a gift for capturing people in day-to-day, incidental situations. Cooke has forged poetry out of common speech which synthesises unpretentiously the elemental energy at her fingertips.
‘challenging and fresh … honest in her verse.’ – Otago Daily Times, 13 Oct 2008
Kay McKenzie Cooke
Kay McKenzie Cooke lives in Dunedin. Her first collection, Feeding the Dogs (OUP), won the Montana Book Awards Best First Book of Poetry in 2003. She followed this with Made for Weather (OUP, 2007). Kay is also an award-winning short story writer and keen photographer.
… challenging and fresh … honest in her verse – Otago Daily Times
More About Kay McKenzie Cooke
Feeding the Dogs
Born to a Red-Headed Woman