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Poetry

Featured image of the remote

the remote

The title of Maggie Sullivan’s second collection is suitably cryptic; the remote suggests detachment as well as control. Sharp, capricious and clever, these poems are interested in process—creative, physical, and political. The opening poem, ”How to build a poem” uses the metaphor of building a wall to demonstrate the creative process: Balance stones, two, three, Read More

Featured image of Reading Barry MacSweeney

Reading Barry MacSweeney

Paul Batchelor has brought together a range of diverse perspectives in Reading Barry MacSweeney which, with its insights about MacSweeney’s life and work, adds much to an understanding of Wolf Tongue, reviewed here on the DURA poetry pages. Contributors include WN Herbert, Harriet Tarlo and MacSweeney’s former partner, SJ Litherland. Batchelor doesn’t flinch from the Read More

Featured image of Wolf Tongue: Selected Poems 1965-2000

Wolf Tongue: Selected Poems 1965-2000

First published in 2003, Wolf Tongue has been re-printed by Bloodaxe, complemented by Paul Batchelor’s illuminating book of essays, Reading Barry MacSweeney, also reviewed here on the DURA pages. MacSweeney, a prodigious poet, selected most of the poems for Wolf Tongue before his death in 2000. For much of his life, he was little known, having Read More

Featured image of Selected Poems

Selected Poems

In a recent online conversation with John Glenday on the subject of poetry editing, Don Paterson confessed to being a notorious re-drafter (ninety variants are not unknown), and fastidious about the ordering of poems in a collection – whilst simultaneously acknowledging that the reader is unlikely to fret much about the outcome. With that in Read More

Featured image of Sleeping Keys

Sleeping Keys

Sleeping Keys is Jean Sprackland’s third poetry collection. It was published in September of last year, following on from her 2007 Costa Poetry Award winning Tilt. Sleeping Keys “looks back at endings and beginnings” – taking its title from one of the poems that epitomises Londoner Sprackland’s chosen themes. The “obsolete treasure[s]” that are “decommissioned Read More

Featured image of A Sure Star in a Moonless Night

A Sure Star in a Moonless Night

Sirkka Turkka (b.1939) is widely acknowledged as a major figure in contemporary Finnish poetry. Since her first collection A Room in Space in 1973, she has published some twenty collections to critical acclaim, winning both the Finlandia Prize and the Eino Leino Prize. This collection, A Sure Star in a Moonless Night, has been translated Read More

Featured image of The On All Things Said Moratorium

The On All Things Said Moratorium

The back cover of Marianne Morris’s The On All Things Said Moratorium, instead of the usual editorial blurb, presents a statement. The poet refers to how language shapes the way we think and the manners in which we structure our lives, culture and society, adding: “the specific, intentional, and pointed use of language may also Read More

Featured image of the lost boys

the lost boys

Published in 2013, the year which saw Michael Symmons Roberts’ Drysalter justly lauded, The Lost Boys bears a warm endorsement from Les Murray. However, Penelope Shuttle’s claim on the cover of the collection that Victoria Field is “that rare avis, the religious poet” rings somewhat hollow. Shuttle is on surer ground with “Place is the Read More

Featured image of The Mind/Body Problem

The Mind/Body Problem

The author of this intimate collection is well-known American feminist poet and essayist Katha Pollitt. Following on from her previous works, The Mind/Body Problem maintains a note of social criticism, although here it is subdued by the more private and urgent theme of nostalgia for things and times passed. Divided into three parts – “The Read More

Featured image of indwelling

indwelling

indwelling is the sixth collection of poems Gillian Allnutt has produced for Bloodaxe. It is a collection of understated beauty: sparse, yet refined and eloquent, yielding the consistent impression of a quiet voice speaking steadfast words. The collection divides into three main parts: “Boxted”, “Stoup”, and “Steppe”. “Boxted” begins with a number of delicately descriptive Read More

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