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Showing 11–20 of 70 results
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No. 21 Five Poems by Angela Leighton
£15.00Add to basket‘Stilt-Jacks’
‘Barn Owl’
‘Saving his Gloves’
‘Humming-Bird Hawk-Moth’
‘Wet Suit’ -
No. 3 NORMAN ACKROYD by Andrew McNeillie
£10.00Add to basketExpanded and revised from Andrew McNeillie’s essay ‘The Last Surviving King of Elmet, or Wildness Regained’ that introduced two shows by Norman Ackroyd: Just be a Poet (The Fine Art Society, London, 2016) and The Western Shore – from Shetland to Co. Cork (The Verey Gallery, Eton College 27 April – 10 September 2017).
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In Search of Poetry by Richard Murphy
£15.00Add to basketW.B. Yeats saw it in dramatic terms. The artist’s choice is between perfection of the life or of the work. There is it seems no half-way house. Either way there is a price to pay. In this most moving book, Richard Murphy presents us with a veritable anatomy of the Yeatsian dilemma. Here is poetry in the making, along with disturbing collateral, told with unflinching honesty.
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No. 20 Five Poems: Deposition by Dan Burt
£15.00Add to basket‘Tumour’
‘Post-Op’
‘Delphi’
‘Totentanz’
‘Coda’ -
No. 19 Five Poems by Robert Selby
£15.00Add to basket‘The Galilean Moons’
‘The Land Girl’s Story’
‘Wild Cherry’
‘The Winter Wood’
‘Shadows on the Barley’ -
No. 18 Five Poems by Nicholas Pierpan
£15.00Add to basket‘Jupiter’s Red Spot’
‘The American Cincinnati’
‘Seeking and Finding the Farmer’
‘Buddha’s Fear of the Lotus-Eaters’
from ‘Another Day at the Office’ -
No. 17 Five Poems by Sean O’Brien
£15.00Add to basket‘Jaguar’
‘Storm Beach’
‘One Way or Another’
‘At the Flood’
‘Goddess’ -
No. 16 Five Poems: An Essay in Mourning by John Burnside
£15.00Add to basket‘On Digging a Grave for Oxy’
‘A Changeling’
‘Self-Portrait in 1979’
‘Indelible’
‘Coda: Fake Cochineal’ -
No. 15 Five Poems by Patrick McGuinness
£15.00Add to basket‘First of the Last Goodbyes’
‘Naming the Animals’
‘Mother as Spy’
‘Last View of the Humber Bridge’
‘Prose Poem Between Stations’ -
Tom Paulin reads W. B. Yeats
£10.00Add to basketNo one reads Yeats half as well. As the reader will see from poems presented here, Paulin’s Yeats is not a predictable one, but a personal one, which in this case is to say a poet’s one. It’s a treat not to be missed.
Showing 11–20 of 70 results