
Ian Parks was born in 1959 in Mexborough, South Yorkshire and was educated at Sheffield
University and Ruskin College, Oxford. He was writer-in-residence at North Riding College, Scarborough from 1986 to 1988 and
received a Hawthornden Fellowship in 1991 and a Travelling Fellowship to the USA in 1994. He was one of the National Poetry
Society New Poets in 1996, and A Climb Through Altered Landscapes, his first full collection, was published in 1998.
Recent poems have appeared in Poetry (Chicago), Poetry Review, The London Magazine, The Liberal,
and The Observer, and have been broadcast on BBC Radio 3.
"The finest love poet of his generation."
A last love poem
I was thinking how the daylight disappears,
how one thing blends into another thing
as over river, rooftops, silent park
time slips away without our noticing:
the wave collapses and a cold wind veers
through all the public places where we loved.
That’s what it feels like these years on:
you were quite unexpected,
and it seems
I’ve used up all the images I know –
midnight stations, coastal roads,
red wine, high
windows, lace and sudden snow.
Don’t be surprised if language fails me now.
I turn to face the sunlight. Let
it go.
An anthology of Ian Parks' work - "LOVE
POEMS" - will shortly be published by Flux Gallery Press.

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| Click on picture to go to Flux Gallery Press |
'LOVE POEMS'
Ian Parks was once memorably and rememberedly described as ‘the greatest love poet of his generation’,
a phrase that never ceases to make me smile. While in real life he appears more like the gentlest and most softly-spoken of
the Pirates of the Caribbean, I cannot help confusing his image with that of the chelonian Hugh Heffner, draped in young beauties
naked beneath teasing fur wrappings.
Well he has well and truly slapped the smile off my face this time.
I have a theory that every artist is capable of one flawless work, one perfect expression of themselves. ‘LOVE
POEMS’ is Ian’s epiphany, delivered more quietly than you can possibly imagine.
Whereas among the Hull Rumoured Cities circle T.F. Griffin armours his dejected heart under a carapace burnished
to dazzle, Tony Flynn delivers intimate insights into a life tinged with kindly Catholicism, and Philip Larkin thrusts a double-stiletto
simultaneously to both heart and head, Ian Parks modestly whispers his exquisite verse in precise awe of the ghosts of that
which he transcribes.
His closest like among the poets who come to mind is Holly Roach whose ‘Plans to change and other fables’
proved a younger female version of Ian’s inimitably elegiac verse. Both are love poets and both seem almost to celebrate
the shutting of the door over the ecstasy of an adventure newly embarked upon.
The difference between the two so far – beyond age and gender – is that Ian is also a master of
public verse, the faithful alchemist of both trivial and tragic historical landmarks, one or two examples of which almost
shockingly glide through here.
I hate to single out a single poem from ‘LOVE POEMS’ because they belong longingly together in
one complete embrace, but creation is inevitably followed by desecration, and resists ….
Ghost
Slowly
your touch fades from me.
Again I’m only dreaming
but the soft curve of your spine
has left
its indentationon the sheet,
a question mark
no
answer satisfies.
What
constitutes a haunting?
Is it a chill encounter
at
the bottom of a stair –
an unclenched
fist; a rapid movement
in the dark, dispelling air?
Or
is it love returning
through
an unfamiliar door,
the ones we overlooked
who
loved us most?
And now
I see
I have to let you go.
Waking as dawn commences
On the
cold and empty street
I learn at last what others know:
persistence makes a ghost.
(TR)

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| Click on picture to go to Flux Gallery Press |
'The Cage'
If one were
to suggest to most poets that they be considered for Poet Laureate, they would probably first check out the insult and then
shudder at the thanklessness of the proposition - ask Andrew Motion who, after determined, stoic application to his honorary
role over many years is beginning to chew carpets, apparently.
Ennobling
an otherwise trivial event, such as some landmark Queen's birthday or Commonwealth Day bash, must be one of the most difficult
(would it were impossible) responsibilities in literature.
However, I
reckon that Ian Parks would be a genius at it.
In his collection
of poems, "The Cage", he does not show much evidence of his being "the greatest love poet of his generation",
as he was once described, because there are scant few love poems here (except the magnificent "The Gallery"), but
his much-praised mastery of event and place is remarkable (and all his work is suffused with a loving tone of sorts). Anybody
who can make a powerful poem of finding a sledge in his mum's cellar, as Ian does in "Sledge", can surely craft
a landmark piece around, say, the nationalisation of Bradford & Bingley.
At this point,
Ian Parks is probably thinking "Is this review taking the mick?", to which the answer is "Definitely not, Ian."
Take for instance
"Body and Soul", his jazz evocation of Harlem clicking its fingers to the "shimmer'" of a Coleman
Hawkins phrase, or his similar treatment of a pianist playing desultorily in a "Late Night Hotel", or his gossipy
lament to the themed refurbishment of a pub in "The Figurehead".
Then there
are there are the fond recollections of his father (in "The Cage") and his grandfather (in "Over The Top"),
miners both.
Most strikingly
(and in some cases that is a pun) there is a whole series of poems which reverently recall moments and things of historic
significance, major and minor - a tribute to "Rosa Parks", "Salvage", "The Burning Pier" (Southend?),
"Orgreave", "The March" (against the Iraq war), "The Angel of the North", "The Last Rising"(what
happened in Newport? - my ignorance), "Gettysburg" (I can do that one), "Menwith Hill", "Vigil",
"On the Post Office Steps", "The Occupation".
So, when Andrew
Motion resigns his Poet Laureateship in frustration and despair, this is Ian Park's compelling CV. I think he should cream
it (to keep the Hull association going). Finally here is a poet equal (and more) to such an awesome duty - the man in whose
poems you can often hear a pin drop. There would be majesty indeed. (TR).

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'Shell Island'
Shell Island,
Ian Parks's second full collection of poems, extends and develops concerns already present in his previous work: those
of love, loss, and the relationship that exsists between the individual and society. Themes of encounter – particularly
with the miraculous – and of the resonating quality of history are juxtaposed with a series of intense love lyrics.
The main preoccupation of the collection,
however, is with the transitory nature of human experience and how that experience informs our perception of "the rule
of love and politics".