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Wednesday 1 April 2020

"A Beautiful Pain" by CATHERINE BARRY (March 2020 Book Of Poetry, Published by Salmon Press, In Conjunction With The Arts Council Of Ireland)





A Beautiful Pain 
by
 CATHERINE BARRY 

(March 2020 Book of Poems 
Published by Salmon Poetry of Ireland
In Conjunction with The Arts Council Of Ireland)

"...Women Are Made Of Mars Bars..." 

Catherine Barry has had four novels published since 2001 and the quietly dignified "A Beautiful Pain" is her first Book of Poetry brought to us in paperback by Salmon Press (published March 2020 in her native Ireland).

As a wee bit of a scribbler myself - Poetry and the purchasing of it is a little like art installations in galleries with really big rooms housing equally huge egos - enough to bring many of us out in a rash and a snuffled giggle. The danger of pretentiousness lurks in the over-priced coffee emporium stroking its twisty beard as it ponders gender-neutral Nihilism. Should I identify as a non-binary coconut or is that numerically Coconut-ist? Oh dear…

I say this, because hand-on-heart, Cathy's poetry couldn't be less uppity or arty-farty and thankfully isn't the online ranting of woke terrorists either. Its thoughts and hard-won observations are firmly based in humanity – trying to make red lemonade (its an Irish thing) when life keeps throwing you beginning-to-mold lemons. These straight-talking stories try to portray the hopeful moments too alongside the inevitable losses and the casual cruelty of dirty laundry that just refuses to go away.

The undercurrent in her writing quickly becomes clear. These 80 or so pieces are filled with the ebb and flow of survival - a decades long battle with alcoholism, abandonment and not least of all - the final egg in the face - Breast Cancer which has now gone on to the worst stage. In fact the first poem speaks of local gurriers tormenting her Dublin home in 1999 by pelting it with eggs for weeks on end. Yet she rises above life's subtle persecution and goes on with the help of family, her two children (now grown up) and mentors within genuinely decent Care and Self-Help groups.

Few poetry volumes are page-turners, but this one is. There's a beautifully observed piece called “Lyric” that describes her father John Francis Barry as he wrestles with four remotes in his old age – stood in front of his beloved Hi Fi in the 'sitting room' (we don't do lounges in Ireland) – as she knocks on the window pane to alert him that she's arrived home. His infectious smile, belief in people and his presence still so huge even after his death at the age of 86 nearly four years prior. Her Mum Maureen walking down the street also in her mid 80ts with her artists sense of clothing, positivity and wild fighting spirit – telling off a neighbour she thinks is slagging off Catherine's older sister Francis. Charlie who saved her from drink and its destruction – pride in her kids – anger at the disease and so on. It’s very personal stuff for sure – "My Children Come First", "Love Me When I Fall", "Breast Cancer Awareness Month" and "Strong Women" - but its also real and humane and accessible.

There's anger and rage as well - a short heartbreaking piece called "Tuam Babies" with lines like…

We're down here. In a dirty hole.
A fitting grave for shame.
Denial's forwarding address.
God forgive us.

Or hurt for an elderly lady in "Prayer For The Nameless" - found dead and abandoned - the notoriously tight Irish Government and Irish Banks screwing over the nation and most vulnerable with endless austerity measures since the entirely avoidable 2008 stock market collapse…

Let's salute the country
That abandoned
The very people
Who built it.
Welcome to Ireland
Land of saints and scholars
White collars with no moral compass…

Or dealing with setbacks and spiritual turmoil in "Teabags"

No blend of perfection
So to speak.
I am at my strongest
When I am weak. 

I enjoyed Catherine's new Book of Poems and have re-read many since – especially in this time that cries out for hope and some better horizon that we can't maybe see at the moment.

So if you fancy a woman who writes lines like "Men Are From Mars. Women are made of Mars Bars…" in a booked called "A Beautiful Pain" – then this little bowl of poetic chicken soup is the self-isolation read for you...

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