
Cold Night Lullaby
by Colin Mackay
Genres: PoetryPages: 87
Rating:

Synopsis:No publisher summary found, so I'll have a go: Cold Night Lullaby is a volume of poems written by Colin Mackay, a Scottish poet who took aid to Bosnia during the war, and saw horrific things there. Cold Night Lullaby is his account, in poems, of that experience.
Cold Night Lullaby is Colin Mackay’s working-through of the things he saw and experienced in Bosnia: the deaths of other people who were there, like him, to provide aid; the death they saw all around them; the violence; the corpses.
And the death of the Serbian woman he fell in love with, Svetlana, along with her two children. He said goodbye to them in the morning, drove away in the afternoon to arrange taking them with him to Britain, and drove back to find them dead, killed by other Serbs as traitors. Graphic details: View Spoiler »
It’s a powerful volume which I know about because of Karine Polwart’s song, Waterlily. I recommend the song as well, though it’s less graphic by a very long way.
This was a reread for me, and it hasn’t lost any of its punch.
This book really hits home about the dreadful waste of war. I found it a tough read and cried a lot. I also came to it from Karine Polwart’s song and her telling of his basic story at a concert. 10/10