Sing
to me
Louis Hemmings
Avonbeg, Newtownpark Avenue, Blackrock, Co. Dublin,
Ireland; 2004; £6.50 plus £1.60 p.&p. UK; Pbk.;
81pp.
Sing to me is an autobiographical memoir from Dublin poet and bookseller
Louis Hemmings, himself an LCF associate member and reviewer. Born in
1957 his faith has been tested by the loss of a child and vicissitudes
affecting not only himself but his forebears.
Despite the setbacks there have been blessings too, which he is not
slow to bring out, and a firm trust in God's providence has sustained
him. He got jobs in bookshops; took himself to America for a creative
writing course; married; built up his own bookselling business; won prizes;
published Holly, a story of stillbirth, Samovar Press, 1995 – a
narrative that it is hoped may help others – and Firstborn, Samovar
Press, 1993, which offers both personal poems and more public ones on
figures such as Booth, Shaftesbury, Cruden, Athanasius. In this he emulates
Cornish Methodist poet Jack Clemo who, with Joni Mitchell and Leonard
Cohen, influenced Hemmings.
The second half of Sing to me interweaves snatches of his correspondence
with Clemo with the narrative text. This helps to bring out the trustful,
direct faith and generous human sympathies of both men but the mainly
personal context of these teasingly brief snippets, embedded in the main
stratum, has its cons for students of Clemo. Hemmings has virtue of his
own as an able, quiet-voiced, honest narrator, however, and this is a
commendably accessible, straightforward book.
Contributed by Brian Louis Pearce, MA, FCLIP, FRSA,
a retired College Librarian now working as a novelist and poet.