Reviews

Europa by Moniza Alvi

casparb's review against another edition

Go to review page

thjought I would tinker through here , an incredibly! difficult collection but written with a feather & so admirable. Last half holds strongest for me by a good chunk. Conceit is There but I wanted more? tho I'm not all attention enough these day

foggy_rosamund's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

This intelligent, moving series of poems centre around the image of Europa and the bull. They study the place of rape within myth, and how we use myth to explore trauma. Alvi's poetry rarely uses formal structures: she writes clear, pared-back free verse which conveys her depth of emotion and complexity of tone in clear language. These poems require the reader to sit with them for a while: I read the first three or four poems too rapidly, and missed their heart: the simple language belies the depth thought and resonance within them.

The cover image, a mermaid with her tail sliced in half, is a painting by Tabitha Vevers, and is explored by Alvi in her poem "Mermaid", one of the most striking in the collection. It gives the reader a lucid account of a rape, in brutal but restrained imaged ("He fell on her, sunk himself deep / into the apex.") and describes the mermaid's immediate response ("She played dead on the rock // dead by the blue lagoon / dead to the ends of her divided tail.") It's a poem I keep returning to, as a raw, vibrant account of an unspeakable act. It's hard to write about trauma, and to put these moments into words, and Alvi looks the horrific straight on, and allows the reader to really look at it too. There is a lot of value in that.

Though this collection is full of painful emotions, it's never hard to read, but rather gives the reader space to assess their own understanding of trauma, and to think about the poet's depictions of it. This collection feels like a complete narrative, and I would recommend reading it from cover to cover: each poem gives you an important window into the poet's themes. I very much recommend this book.

jessmaeshelley's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

'How easily the knot had come undone / once the time was ripe / the golden cord falling away / from the wooden chest. / And they all had to be unleashed / every poisonous one.'

A cut-throat and wild collection examining the effects of ancient and modern traumas.

My favourite poems were; Post-Traumatic / Her Symptoms / Candle / Mermaid / Europa & the Bull / Night / Red Apples / Fish Swimming / and A Gift.

Beautiful abstract language. At times inspiring, I felt a deep resonance and connection. At other times it swept over my head. But overall, this collection has dark, angry, energy. And I absolutely adored its wit and the way Alvi uses myth to explain the unexplainable.

More...