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This is the third Selected Poems by Edwin Morgan from Carcanet, but
the first since 2000 and the first to cover the full range of his
poetry from his first collection in 1952 to his last in 2010, the
year of his death at the age of ninety. All his different voices
speak here - animals, inanimate objects, dramatic monologues by
people, (famous people, unknown people and imaginary people) - in a
multitude of forms and styles - sonnets, science fiction, concrete,
sound, his own invented stanzas - together with his evocations of
place, especially his home city of Glasgow, and a wide selection of
his deservedly famous love poems. They all illustrate his incurable
curiosity and a kind of relentless optimism for humanity.
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Paper Cut (Paperback)
Hamish Whyte; Photographs by Kenny Whyte; Designed by narrator typesetters and designers
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R281
Discovery Miles 2 810
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Family is the one thing we all know about - whether family gives
you strength, or breaks your heart, whether your idea of family
stays steadfast through generations, or whether your family is a
million miles away from kids or rosy-cheeked grannies. This book
helps us think about and celebrate family moments and family
members. The contents ranges from Robert Burns to Liz Lochhead,
from happy babies to the death of a father. It is the fourth in the
series of anthologies which provide words for important occasions
("Handfast", "Handsel" and "Lament", also published by Polygon and
the Scottish Poetry Library).
This volume brings together a number of hard-to-find reviews,
essays, memoirs and journal pieces by Gael Turnbull, a central
figure in the interaction between American and British poetry in
the 1950s, 60s and 70s, and also publisher of the excellent small
press, Migrant. Shearsman published his Collected Poems, 'There are
words...' in 2006, and this companion volume fills out the picture
of an influential figure in British letters, with a number of
pieces on poets such as Basil Bunting and Roy Fisher, as well as
nods in the direction of Olson and Creeley on the other side of the
Atlantic. The book is introduced by the poet's widow, Jill
Turnbull, who has also made the final selection of pieces to be
included, with Hamish Whyte, Turnbull's long-time publisher in
Edinburgh.
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