paperboats

Climate | Writing | Action | Scotland

Paperboats Zine

The urge to explore and celebrate all the kinds of lives of Planet Earth is stronger than ever, but the environmental and ecological crisis demands we also lift our eyes, and our voices, to species extinction and habitat loss, to what is happening to the forests and hills, the rivers and seas, our streets and gardens. The writer’s instinct to pay attention has never been more vital. Literature can help us to see the natural world – and our place in it – differently.

ISSUE SIX: NATURE’S VOICE

Edited by Ian Grosz and Alex Nye
In this issue of the Paperboats Zine, we tune in and try to hear Nature’s voice. What follows is testament to the many different ways Nature can speak to us. In poetry and prose, a diverse range of writers bear witness to the vulnerability of birds and other animals; the human impacts on climate and environment; hear the imagined song of trees; give voice to glaciers and storms, mosses and lichen. We learn of grass-roots efforts to respond to the threat of extinction, and we recognise the need to pause and to listen, to take note and act before it is too late.

The urgency of this message vibrates through all of the wonderful contributions included in this issue, and we are hugely proud to bring you the work of each of the writers featured. We are particularly delighted to include a specially commissioned poem by international poet, artist and curator, Madhu Raghavendra. Madhu was awarded the Charles Wallace Fellowship by the University of Stirling in 2024. His opening poem ‘Orbit’ sets the scene and encapsulates the themes of this issue perfectly.

Orbit

We breathe in.

Infant seahorses
are released in a microplastic home,
mangroves drown for oil towns

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Summer Storm

The Japanese anemones don’t know what to do.
They swither and sway, all dusty-pink confusion.
They’ve never met wind like this before,

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Speaking Beech

Someone will have to stand, to raise their voices.
Unlikely to be the people five miles high
underlining death sentences in vapour trails.

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Alder

Ankle-deep in still water, bark plump
and yielding to that dark mirror of
liquid – there is some shape here
I recognise.

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Being Heard

A robin is singing from the lilac tree. The wistful, doodling song is achingly familiar, yet I realise I haven’t heard it for a while.

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Hirundine Home

I wander around the garden, deciding to go barefoot on the sodden grass and notice jewels on the washing line

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Snow Globe

Frozen under this glass dome
I am their most-visited exhibit:
they file past dressed in solar shields

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The Bi-Polar Bear 

Before any of this had ever happened,
before The Vanishing and, now, after it
has gone, if anyone had actually asked

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Hunter’s Moon

The agroforestry talk had included poems about belonging, photos of Mangalitza pigs in woodland pasture. Now, on our way home, a saffron half-moon

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Sundew Rescue

How can you speak of bleak
when there is all this glisten?

Listen to my peep of lowgrow –

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Instructions for Survival

Wipe with cotton balls of clouds
the gaping wounds of the ozone layer
and suture them with the rainbow’s
multicoloured thread.

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The First New Day

So, I’m a lichen. Not an ordinary
grey-green lichen fattening on a tree
but a brilliant yellow lichen
on the headboard of our bed

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