
Show You're Working Out
by liz breslin
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What do you get if you cross Pākehā stories from the rural south of Te Waipounamu with scissors, glue and a want to reveal structural and personal violences of settler colonisation? It’s not a joke but some parts of liz breslin’s third full length collection, show you’re working out, are funny.
The play on ‘your’/’you’re’ destabilises a singular sense of story - showing that you’re working out is what it can feel important to do in a relationship, or a small community, when you want to be accepted. And ‘show your working out’ is what maths exams at school sometimes say. Put marks on the page to signify the thinking that you have done.
liz’s experimental and engaging marks on the pages of this collection include poems about complicity, crocs, cycling, DIY, domestic abuse, the queerness of hands, Pride, Pilates, needlework, what gets called nature, reality tv, scissoring, sharks, Sharon from the Speight’s ads, wellness culture and white supremacy.
About the Author
liz breslin is a writer, editor and performer of Polish, Irish and English descent, now living in Ōtepoti Dunedin in Aotearoa New Zealand. Liz’s previous full-length poem collections are in bed with the feminists (Dead Bird Books, 2021), winner of the Kathleen Grattan Prize for a Sequence of Poems 2020, and Alzheimer’s and a Spoon (OUP, 2017), one of the NZ Listener’s Top 100 books of 2017.