A Poetry Book Society Autumn 2021 Recommendation. Virga is the third
book of poems by Zimbabwean poet Togara Muzanenhamo, following on from
his acclaimed collections Spirit Brides (2006) and Gumiguru (2014).
Set in the twentieth century, Virga features historical events woven
together by the weather. From the spiritual silence of a sundog during
the 1911 Japanese Antarctic Expedition, to the 1921 World Championship
chess matches in the Cuban heat, to the final hours of a young Bavarian
mountaineer in the Bernese Alps in 1936, and strange white clouds
decimating whole villages in northern Cameroon in 1986--the poems
capture stories of a rapidly evolving century beneath an ancient,
fragile sky. The title relates to the meteorological phenomenon in which
a column, shaft, or band of rain or snow is seen falling from a cloud
but never reaching the earth-- evaporating before touchdown. Like
Gumiguru, which has so much to do with weather, Virga continues with
it, its impact on our daily lives. But, here, his geography broadens out
to include wider worlds and different histories artfully strung together
by the poet's fascination with the elements.