Shrine to Lata Mangeshkar
By (Author) Kerry Leves
Puncher and Wattmann
Puncher and Wattmann
1st January 2008
Australia
General
Non Fiction
A821
Short-listed for NSW Premier's Literary Award Kenneth Slessor Prize for Poetry 2009
Paperback
90
Width 148mm, Height 210mm
Is it flowers Women plait them into their hair; truckies flower their driving-cabins for long dusty journeys... Is it colour Emerald green ricefields; or the sun's gold flare on an egret's wing as it rises Is it the yellow of mustard flowers, or the gaudy spectrum of a street festooned with movie posters Is it Varanasi - the country's spiritual heart, some say - where pilgrims dunk themselves in the great Ganges River; or Tirupati, pilgrimage place of the south, a thousand steps up a mountain Or is it Arunachala, also in the south, where the sage Ramana Maharshi taught "self inquiry" (Ask, he said, who inquires) If Ramana's "self inquiry" suggests a meditator's silence, it may also be relevant to ask, "Who sings", since music and song permeate India. The voice of Lata Mangeshkar, honoured and revered playback singer of over five thousand Indian films, seems to express the soul of India. These poems attempt a tribute. The poet, short-story writer and novelist Vicki Viidikas pitchforked Kerry Leves into India. Together they travelled down, up and across the country. They didn't do it "posh". Out of the travelling came these poems of Kerry's: an outsider's inside journey. "This poetry puts you in your senses..." Pam Brown "The western traveller in Asia is a familiar theme, but it is tackled here with fresh insight and a welcome sensitivity. The spiritual awakening (probably more accurately described as expansion) of the speaker is genuine and believeable. The rich detail in these poems is surprisingly counterbalanced with their economy."Sara Moss