Poetry Award Shortlist
Title: Fugitive
Author: Simon Tedeschi
Publisher: Upswell Publishing
In 1917, a young composer writes a suite of twenty pieces for piano. They are short, violent and strange, the music of another world. In 1938, a young Jewish family flees Italy for Sydney, Australia. In 1942, another family, this time Polish, are nearly destroyed. Half a century later, a young man begins to understand the role these strange visions have played in everything that came before him and all that has come to be. Fugitive, Simon Tedeschi’s first book, straddles the borders of poetry and prose, fiction and fact, trauma and testimony, filled with what Russian poet Konstantin Balmont called the fickle play of rainbows.
Judges' report
Taking its title and its inspiration from a series of ghostly, minimalist piano pieces by Prokofiev, Visions Fugitives, Simon Tedeschi’s fugitive visions cover an extraordinary amount of ground: the everyday strangeness of the body, memories of childhood and the ambiguous gift of musical precocity, the traumatic history of a family partly destroyed by the Holocaust, and the inexplicable power of music and art. Fugitive is concerned with borders: between poetry and prose, meaning and meaninglessness, the self and others. Its intense, fugal style contains great humour and great pathos. It is a work of stunning individuality.Extract
Even though I don't get maths or physics, I have an intuitive understanding that's more sensation than sense, more impulse than understanding, the way a groove––both a feel and a furrow––is captured in the body rather than the brain (or, as the song goes, in the heart). The upturned air of a grace note, the tacit at the end of a score, a slow movement with all its little prickles of doubt and desire. (Prokofiev referred to his Mimolyotnosti as little doggies-–because they bite.) Some of the Mimolyotnosti are ridiculous, others tender, all painful as an envelope that cuts your tongue. Be careful of these little ones, Sergei seems to say. Ballgown to clown, but always behind frosted glass. Waiting for the dreaded knock–– and when we answer the door (which we must), we're found wanting. We're staring at screens, blunted by shock, less a momentary apperception than a totalising force. What Baudelaire and Benjamin saw is now a deafening music. I cannot write this paragraph without checking my feed. I need to scrape the scum off the stove before midnight. My right toenail hurts because I've picked at it. My cat lies on her back, shows me her belly. She must once have had kittens. Her teats make me uncomfortable, one in particular. Three Catholic worshippers have been beheaded in France. I crack my jaw so loudly my wife hears it through her Ear Pods. I'm attacked by regret for a bastard act twenty- five years ago. I was just doing what was done to- No excuse. I've lost the filigree of sentence