Accessibility Tools

  • Content scaling 100%
  • Font size 100%
  • Line height 100%
  • Letter spacing 100%

Sarah Day

Sarah Day

Sarah Day’s ninth collection of poems, Slack Tide, was recently published with Pitt Street Press. Her books have received national awards including the Queensland Premier’s and have been shortlisted for the Prime Minister’s, the NSW, and Tasmanian Premier’s Awards.

Sarah Day reviews ‘The Place of Tides’ by James Rebanks

December 2024, no. 471 25 November 2024
Readers who loved James Rebanks’s autobiographical The Shepherd’s Life: A tale of the Lake District (2015) – a bestseller at home and abroad, translated into sixteen languages, and winner of numerous prizes – will welcome this new work. His first book tells the story of a recalcitrant youth who wants nothing more than to leave school early to work on his parents’ and grandparents’ farm ... (read more)

'A Deep Black Sleep: A new opera about political expediency' by Sarah Day

ABR Arts 28 February 2023
In 1990, composer and artistic director Konstantin Koukias and production director Werner Ihlenfeld founded IHOS Opera in Tasmania. Audiences were excited and astonished by the scale and ambition of the director’s vision when they attended his earlier, spectacular productions such as Days and Nights of Christ, To Traverse Water, and Tesla. IHOS works became associated with huge spaces. Tesla to ... (read more)

Sarah Day reviews 'Acanthus' by Claire Potter and 'Glass Flowers' by Diane Fahey

June 2022, no. 443 25 May 2022
Examine for a moment an ordinary mind on an ordinary day. The mind receives a myriad impressions … From all sides they come, an incessant shower of innumerable atoms, and as they fall, as they shape themselves into the life of Monday or Tuesday, the accent falls differently from of old. Virginia Woolf, in her seminal essay on modern fiction (1919), might have been describing Claire Potter ... (read more)

Sarah Day reviews 'Animals with Human Voices' by Damen O'Brien

March 2022, no. 440 24 January 2022
Damen O’Brien’s first collection is an exceptional accomplishment. His individual poems have won several competitions (including the 2017 Peter Porter Poetry Prize). O’Brien signals the emphases of Animals with Human Voices in his afterword, stating that the world has become a ‘meaner’ place during the ten years of its completion: ‘a place of harsh politics, that values outrage over ki ... (read more)

'Aldinga Cliffs', a poem by Sarah Day

November 2021, no. 437 25 October 2021
for Gabriella Smart There’s no getting away from things.There is driving, then walking milesalong a quiet coast on a rising tide –with the back-of-the-mind consciousnessthat in an hour or so the seawill have reached the cliffs of shalewith their pebble threads to denote other epochsof Earth events and that you will be wading in wateron return. There is walking the distance to seethe Monarch b ... (read more)

'To Hassan', a new poem by Sarah Day

November 2020, no. 426 22 October 2020
And to the other men from Afghanistan,and Iran and Iraq, who prepared a feast for meone midday, years ago on my way to work,laid the clean sheet smoothon the worn carpet of the furnitureless house,placed dishes of spiced rice and chickpeas,and slid a plate towards me –there were not enough platesto go around – and with upturned palmsurged me to eat first,I want to thank you and sayI’ll alway ... (read more)

State Editor's Introduction by Sarah Day | States of Poetry Tasmania - Series Two

States of Poetry Tasmania - Series Two 18 April 2018
A. E. Houseman memorably said: I could no more define poetry than a terrier can define a rat. It’s not an easy matter to justify one’s decisions when faced with numerous poems from which to make a limited selection. There’s no programmatic guide to what makes a poem successful although the impact of a good poem is something we all know and recognise. Generally it has something to do with reg ... (read more)

States of Poetry 2016 - TAS | State Editor's Introduction by Sarah Day

States of Poetry Tasmania - Series One 22 February 2016
For its small population, Tasmania has produced, or attracted from elsewhere, a significant number of published poets, past and present. Not all have loved the place. In the case of Gwen Harwood, the island state was her prison, or at least that’s what she told her friends: ‘I HATE HOBART’, ‘When do we leave?’ and ‘Get me outa here’. ‘My only fear is that I’ll die before I get ou ... (read more)