Internationally award-winning poet and writer

some days the bird


​***NYC BIG BOOK AWARDS DISTINGUISHED FAVORITE***​

***COMMENDED - SOCIETY OF WOMEN WRITERS NSW

BOOK AWARDS 2024***

***BEST DRESSED - SUNDRESS ACADEMY FOR THE ARTS 2024***


Poetry collection written by Anne Casey and Heather Bourbeau, published by Beltway Editions in 2022.


BOOK INFORMATION:

More information on Beltway Editions website.


WHERE TO BUY:


'Some Days The Bird' can be purchased direct from the publisher: Beltway Editions, and via major online book retailers and bookshops.

​​SUMMARY:


Throughout 2021, as COVID and climate change battled for supremacy in the hearts and minds of the world, American poet Heather Bourbeau and Sydney-based Irish poet, Anne Casey engaged in a poetry conversation back and forth across the globe, alternating each week, to create 52 poems over 52 weeks. With poems anchored in their gardens, they buoyed each other through lockdowns and exile from family, through devastating floods, fires, wild winds and superstorms. Some Days The Bird,  a collection of internationally recognized and award-winning poems, is the result of their weekly communiqués from different hemispheres (and opposing seasons) in verse. 


LAUNCH SPEECH:


Read a speech by Margaret O'Brien for the official Irish launch of 'Some Days The Bird' at Poetry Plus at Brewery Lane Theatre in Carrick-on-Suir, Co Tipperary, Ireland on 30 June 2023 - published by Rochford Street Review:  'Creative Collaboration: Margaret O’Brien launches ‘Some Days the Bird’ by Anne Casey and Heather Bourbeau'  


​​RESPONSES TO THIS BOOK:


​“Lyrical ballads for our fraught and troubled decade, Heather Bourbeau and Anne Casey’s Some Days The Bird recasts the great Wordsworth and Coleridge double-act into the language of our day. Conversing across continental time-shifts between North America and Australia, from garden to garden, window to window, the abundant contrary states of seasons and politics are released amid the drumbeat of the pandemic. Some Days The Bird is a powerful record of all our recent lives.

Dealing with the daily pressures of isolation, the minutiae of nature becomes an unsentimental refuge as the separate pasts of both poets’ experiences of family and country are inscribed in these clear-eyed, accessible and ‘spoken’ poems. The ecology of our world is matched by the ecology of physical life focussing upon women’s lives and bodies, turning this conversation between two poets into a powerfully rendered portrait of our age. This is an important book. Never sombre or introverted, but full of the magic of naming things – birdlife, trees, the landscapes of home and the territories of memory – Some Days The Bird is essential, radiant reading.”

— Gerald Dawe, Poet and Fellow Emeritus, Trinity College Dublin


“A complex and layered collection, Some Days The Bird by Heather Bourbeau and Anne Casey embraces the wonders of nature while both poets react to and survive a world- wide pandemic. The world has shrunk under the confines of lockdown, yet these exquisite meditations shared between writerly friends and based in meticulous observation express the expansive and redeeming power that poetry can provide even when humans must physically distance themselves from others. From cataloguing lush gardens teeming with life (‘Some days you’re the seed, some days the bird’ and ‘Watching the grass grow’) to witnessing nature’s deadly force due to climate change (‘The Minister for Bushfire Recovery is reassigned to Floods’ and ‘Days of wild weather’) the collection demonstrates how human connection remains possible through our connection to the natural landscape. Every flower, every creature, every raindrop Bourbeau and Casey observe entwines writer and reader together, without need for masking or distancing. Some Days The Bird is luscious poetry at its best, rich and satisfying, and at all points luminous.”

— JC Reilly, Managing Editor, Atlanta Review


“This work is both deeply serious and also powerfully playful in the very best way. Casey and Bourbeau, in a deeply engaged poetic conversation, are not afraid to be clear-eyed about what is occurring in our COVID-world but their attention to precise details, to an almost reverent naming of seemingly ordinary garden processes, makes these beautifully observed moments quite extraordinary. These are poems which use language in ever inventive ways: ‘Tawny frogmouths’ are ‘two tiny tight- lipped shut-eyed fluff-bundles’; an ‘overhanging fog’ is one that swathes with a ‘seductive’ trousseau. We see serendipitous ‘Nasturtiums never planted sprout and spill’ and we witness clusters of ‘wind-seeded crocus’ as these two poets turn their eye to the necessary and uplifting idea that we are not quite done yet, even while their lament is what makes their work all the more resonant. Essential reading.”

— Siobhan Campbell, Poet, Critic and Academic, Senior Lecturer of Creative Writing, The Open University
 


In Some Days The Bird, all that is Anthropocene, broken, and damned becomes sensuously palpable, painfully suffocating, and hot to the touch. Bourbeau and Casey seek not to cure or make whole with pacifying cliché, but rather to engage each other (and fortunately the reader) in the slivers of beauty that occasionally wind through bitter despair, death, injustice, and sorrow. We are flies on their wall, swatter-smashed by the truth in verse that is the poet’s great charge. Here in fragments of feathers across oceans and continents, it lives inspirationally in Some Days.”

— J. Drew Lanham, Poet and Distinguished Professor of Wildlife Ecology, Clemson University


“This florescent poetry conversation lifts the reader out of the wastes into the possibility of a renewal and fecundity that are not trapped in systems of oppression or prescriptive readings of nature, body or planet. Heather Bourbeau and Anne Casey speak across the world, garden to garden, local experience to local experience, and across the traumas of pandemic and the disasters of the climate crisis, with a sensitive awareness of the impacts the dramatic ecological changes are having on the planet. This is an enduring private and public lyrical interaction, that neither obscures the brutal truths nor fails to observe and record the brilliance of life in its myriad forms.”


— John Kinsella, Poet, Novelist, Critic, Essayist, Emeritus Professor of Literature and Environment, Curtin University​


Some Days The Bird

by Heather Bourbeau and Anne Casey

(Beltway Editions 2021)


***NYC BIG BOOK AWARDS DISTINGUISHED FAVORITE***


***BEST DRESSED - SUNDRESS ACADEMY FOR THE ARTS 2024***