Books by Helen Carr

a big mess of books

books heaped and piled

Vita Sackville West’s Garden Book

Colette My Mother’s House

A Modern Herbal, Food for Free

The Paintings of Aneurin Jones

seed catalogues, a bottle of organic juice
shelves of books horizontal, vertical   

the RHS on Roses, Adrian Mole

Gertrude Jekyll on the sofa’s arm  

Anne Tyler on a hand carved stool

Cat asleep upon the Geiriadur Mawr

teacup on Japanese Design

papers slewed across piano lid, pens

a pile of letters on an ancient wooden chair

a list of field names and their origins

books teetering on the piano top Ackroyd on Blake

ragged sheet music in a heap

painting of a young girl in the primitive style

To the Lighthouse on the fire guard, the RHS on Pruning below a cup of tea

 O’Brien on the windowsill, Murdoch on the floor

A chess set balanced on a hand thrown bowl

A jug of fading flowers,

School work spilling from a rucksack on the door

Harris tweed hanging from a hook

Seed  packets on the shorter OED

and on the mantelpiece, Rebecca West,

The Fountain Overflows.

One thought on “Books by Helen Carr

  • 26th May 2020 at 5:04 pm
    Permalink

    This is a particularly good demonstration of the power of accumulated detail, detail literally piled on top of detail. It also shows how, for some kinds of writing, there no need for traditional sentences or even verbs. And there is structure in the apparent randomness of the piece. Each piece of information has relevance and helps to build up the image of the person or people who inhabit the room. Clearly, there an interest in gardening, in things Welsh, in literature of the twentieth century. And, just when I was thinking of the couple who lived in the room as quite old, we get the surprise of the ‘school work’ (or is one of the residents a teacher?). All in all, an excellent interpretation of the exercise.

    Reply

Leave a Reply

Your e-mail address will not be published.