It’s Poetry Friday and this week I have been lucky enough that, in a week of lockdown, I have been able to keep up my beach walks in the one hour of exercise allowed. My beach is always beautiful, and always different – no two visits are the same.
This week, there were some special surprises. On Tuesday I had an amazing dolphin encounter (you can see some footage in my post below). And then, because I thought that couldn’t be topped, Wednesday brought an even bigger surprise – a seal! 
Yes, there s/he was, just a couple of metres offshore, splashing and fishing and generally being amazing. Again, you can see some footage in the post below.
So, when I sat down to try to draft a new poem for Poetry Friday, it isn’t surprising that at least one of these creatures had to feature – and, this time, it was the seal.
Sealing a Friendship 
I walked
you swam.
You waved
I waved back
the waves waved too.
I splashed for a closer look
you splashed
with joy.
You caught a fish
I caught your moves
on camera.
I strode
back along the beach
lighter for our meeting.
You swam away
heavy with fish.
I like to think
the smile beneath my mask
mirrored your smile
beneath the water.
(Poem copyright Sally Murphy, 2021)
Today’s Poetry Friday roundup will be hosted by Jone. Swim over there to see what goodies my poetic friends have shared today. I’ll pop in there too – after I’ve had my Friday walk where I know there’ll be more wonders. 




Pablo Neruda: Poet of the People
novel for the year, and also the second by Herrick. What a treat. I’ve read this one before – several times – but it continues to please. With topics including first love, teen hormones and the grief of an absent parent, it’s no surprise that this book is both poignant and funny. Hard to believe it was first published 15 years ago, but not hard to believe it is still in print.
Herrick book of the year, and another reread, for a database project I’m working on with the Australian Centre for Children’s Literature (more on this soon). Joan is navigating high school, first love, and the breakdown of his parents’ marriage. His best mate Manx is there at his side, though he has problems of his own. As with most of Herrick’s work, this is humorous as well as touching.
UK, 2019). This debut written collection by a UK spoken-word poet is suitable for teens and adults, and explores complex topics. I especially connected with poems about writing, and being willing to write, as well as those about grief.
(Audible, 2020). This one was a free download from Audible, and not what I’d normally choose for myself – which is why I listened to it. It’s good to try new things, and at less than three hours listening time, this was a quick read, telling the story of a marriage in trouble after the narrator, Cam, realises his wife has been having an affair. Contemporary fiction, with enough twists and turns to keep it moving, and an interesting look at marriage and family.
from Audible (they offer a free title each month, and I have found this a good way to read different genres). This is the second in a detective series, featuring detectives Jackman & Evans, but, as with other similar series, stands alone. The case they are working , ostensibly searching for two missing girls, becomes really unsettling, but is well woven. I mainly listen to audio books when driving, but this one absorbed me enough that I had to keep listening when at home.
Christmas gift from my wise big sister, Mary, who felt it was just the kind of book we needed in these times. And she was right. Bill Bailey is a comedian and a clever person, and the book is not a ‘how to be happy’ books, but perhaps a reminder that happiness is never permanent, and can be found in moments. It also led to me writing a poem about happiness, which I posted 

