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The second double-issue of Shearsman magazine for 2022 features
poetry by Gordon Alexander, Lisa Blackwell, Cecile Bol, Ken Bolton,
Jessica Bundschuh, Geraldine Clarkson, Angelina D'Roza, Lucy
Hamilton, Denis Harnedy, Finn Haunch, Jill Jones, L. Kiew, Edward
Lee, Hannah Linden, Tim MacGabhann, Aonghas Macneacail, David
Miller, Eliza O'Toole, Rochelle Owens, Peter Riley, Lucy Maxwell
Scott, Lucy Sheerman, Penelope Shuttle, Andrew Taylor and Tamar
Yoseloff, plus translations of Chen Xianfa (by Martyn Crucefix
& Nancy Feng Liang), Dorien De Wit (by Judith Wilkinson) and
Ulrike Almut Sandig (by Karen Leeder).
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Collected Poems
Kelvin Corcoran
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R1,147
R1,003
Discovery Miles 10 030
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A major event, this volume presents some 40 years of work.
"Corcoran has as wide a range and as rich a vocabulary as any poet
now writing. He possesses a flawless ear, a fresh eye for image and
detail, penetrating analysis and a storyteller's gift. He can shift
registers suddenly, from lyric to formal mode to common speech, and
even a snatch of song... Kelvin Corcoran is one of the rare true
poets. Reading him is a privilege and a pleasure, a new awareness."
—David Wevill "Corcoran is a superbly skilled lyricist."
—Frances Leviston, The Guardian "Kelvin Corcoran has allied a
strikingly individual intelligence to a genuinely musical
sensibility." —Don Paterson, The Observer "The 'straight music'
of the English lyrical tradition drives these poems that are honed,
hard, elegant and economic. Then, suddenly, brilliance flashes out
against the grain, in the flaws. It is 'the ripped voice makes us
free'." —Rosmarie Waldrop "Corcoran is at the front of
contemporary poetry: the lyric grace of his language is threaded
with an historical perspective that raises the poetry far beyond
the world of a localised present." —Ian Brinton, Tears in the
Fence "Kelvin Corcoran's recent work inhabits the imagination as a
distinct sphere of abundance, drawn from reality as a celebration
of the true scope of the mind. And the instrument of this is a
written eloquence which takes in the past of poetry and of the
spirit as a freshly lived condition." —Peter Riley, PN Review
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New Collected Poems (Paperback)
Lee Harwood; Edited by Kelvin Corcoran, Robert Sheppard
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R1,190
R1,035
Discovery Miles 10 350
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Lee Harwood's work defines the poetry of an era that saw poetry
itself at its most exciting, expansive and innovative. His
achievement runs through the very core of these qualities and has
enriched the possibilities of poetry through to the present. As a
leading British poet well known for his unique but flexible voice,
speaking in a variety of forms, from direct lyric to elaborate
fictions, from notebook poems to conceptual found texts, from
complex cut-ups to assembled fragments. A restless innovator across
the decades he delighted in working in such a multiplicity of forms
and with a disarming directness that appeared to escape whatever
poetic rules may have been favoured on occasion. His voice is by
turns gentle and erudite, erotic and funny, moving and even
faux-sentimental. Discussions of contemporary poetry are left
incomplete without recognition of his considerable achievements.
From his earliest pamphlet 'title illegible' (1965) to his last
collection 'The Orchid Boat' (2014), 'New Collected Poems'
assembles all the poems (and creative prose) Harwood published in
pamphlet or book form, in broadly chronological order, fashioned
upon the ordering of Harwood's own 2004 'Collected Poems'. Some
excised poems have been restored and fugitive texts that appeared
in an exclusive edition have been included. Brief uncollected
material from the end of his career completes this rich body of
work. 'This new collection is a generously considered gathering of
resistant and supple fragments, hard evidence of a life truly
lived. We are the beneficiaries of these dazzling transfusions of
personality and circumstance. Of remembered and newly encountered
detonations of affect. "The clarity of such moments," Harwood
confesses, can never stay still, even when that seems to be the
required task. Love moves and shifts. Through repeated acts of
making, it coheres and continues.' -Iain Sinclair 'Lee Harwood's
English is like American English in that it lacks a strong sense of
possession. At the same time it has a pearly, soft-focus quality
one rarely sees in American poetry [...] The "great" poetry I like
best has this elf-effacing, translucent quality. Self-effacing not
from modesty but because it is going somewhere and has no time to
consider itself.' -John Ashbery 'Harwood's work returns to local
habitations and names, the lives of family, elegies for friends, to
direct communication among intimates. These vividly rendered,
plain-style evocations, intercut with speculation and emotion,
construct improvised holding environments where the home world and
the safety of loved ones is primary' -Peter Robinson, Times
Literary Supplement
Poets Kelvin Corcoran and Alan Halsey have often collaborated. In
the past this brought us Your Thinking Tracts or Nations (West
House 2001), A Horse That Runs: To & Fro with Wallace Stevens
(Constitutional Information 2015), and Winterreisen (Knives Forks
and Spoons Press, 2019).
The second double-issue of Shearsman magazine for 2021 contains
poetry by Tomi Adegbayibi, Ken Bolton and Peter Bakowski, Daragh
Breen, Belinda Cooke, Stuart Cooke, Gareth Culshaw, Carrie
Etter, Gerrie Fellows, Maria Jastrzebska, Kenny Knight,
Rosanna Licari, Fran Lock, Julie Maclean, Fokinna
McDonnell, John Muckle, Simon Perchik, Kerry Pries, Peter
Robinson, Paul Rossiter, Simon Smith, Maria Stadnicka,
Janet Sutherland, Lydia Unsworth, and Cliff Yates, plus
translations of Cecilie Løveid (by Agnes Scott Langeland),
Gerard de Nerval (by Ian Brinton & Michael Grant) and Ivan
Strpka (by James Sutherland Smith).
Below This Level recounts the experience of prostate cancer:
diagnosis, treatment, and recovery. These poems of tender
affirmation and discovery also face up to the hard facts. Their
expansive lyricism is dedicated to a sustained recognition of the
kindness and intelligence of others.
Surely it's time to write a poem according to John James. Two
quatrains please, written to the opening of A Theory of Poetry."
And so the request went to 29 friends and collaborators of John
James, 28 poets and one artist. John James published his New and
Selected Poems, Sarments, with Shearsman Books in April 2018, but
passed away a month later."Surely it's time to write a poem
according to John James. Two quatrains please, written to the
opening of A Theory of Poetry." The collaborators are Kelvin
Corcoran, Simon Perril, John Hall, Peter Riley, John Temple, Alan
Halsey, John Wilkinson, Ian Patterson, Andrew Duncan, Denise Riley,
Karlien van den Beukel, Peter Hughes, Gavin Selerie, John Goodby,
Simon Smith, Geoff Ward, Anthony Mellors, Anthony Barnett, Lyndon
Davies, Tony Lopez, Nick Totton, Chris Cornwell, Linda Kemp, Cliff
Yates, Robert Vas Dias, Mark Leahy, J.H. Prynne, Romana Huk and
artist Bruce McLean.
The Red and Yellow Book was published by Textures in 1986, the
imprint of Penny Bailey. My recollection is that little from the
book had been published elsewhere previously. This was partly
because it was written and published very quickly. Its writing was
accelerated by the personal events which at first appeared to
interrupt my initial ideas about what I thought I was doing. The
interruption became the real subject in various guises and my first
introduction to such parabasis. The Red and Yellow Book was my
second book to be published but in one sense it was the first. It
was the first I wrote as a book rather than as a collection of
poems. — Kelvin Corcoran
Not Much to Say Really is an account of extended conversations with
four elderly patients in hospital. Standing on the edge of their
time they look back over their lives with good humour, tenderness
and remarkable candour. At every turn these conversations show the
reader that the most personally lived events and experiences are
the most powerfully shared in the common lot of mortality. On that
score they have much to say."We asked the poet, Kelvin Corcoran,
and the doctor and artist, Emma Collins, to meet and speak with
elderly patients in General Hospital, then to translate these
conversations into creative works. The poems and artworks in this
book offer us a glimpse of other human lives; of persons who have
experienced our very own desires, fears and hopes; of human beings
who are now briefly patients. Patients whom we owe a duty beyond
the delivery of just blood tests or drugs or suitable placement.
Patients and persons who, one day soon, we ourselves will be." -Dr
Sam Guglani, Consultant Oncologist & Director, Medicine
Unboxed"Working with interview material from elderly patents,
Kelvin Corcoran's new work conveys 'the miracle of ordinary events
recalled' - births, deaths, weddings, international travel, and
social change. Through his characteristic technique of layering
voices, places and times into a continuous present, Corcoran
re-weaves these testimonies into a Greek chorus of lived
experience. From his generous encounters, Corcoran finds the poetry
and patterns in memories and the gaps between them, exploring how a
life is made, re-made and re-told through the changing textures of
history and language. Songful, humorous, poignant and often very
moving, this work proves just how valuable poetry can be at that
point where it interfaces with medicine." -Andy Brown (co-editor A
Body of Work: Poetry & Medical Writing, Bloomsbury 2016)
The second issue of Shearsman for 2018 contains poetry by Martin
Anderson, James Bell, Guy Birchard, Susie Campbell, Martin
Corless-Smith, Cathy Dreyer, Carrie Etter, Khaled Hakim, Ralph
Hawkins, Jill Jones, Julie Mellor, Drew Milne, Lance Nizami,
Gillian Kidd Osborne, Natasha Sajé, Hilda Sheehan, Lucy Sheerman,
Robert Sheppard, Janet Sutherland, Barbara Tomash and Tamar
Yoseloff, plus translations of three Lithuanian poets by Rimas
Uzgiris: Giedrė Kazlauskaitė, Judita Vaičiūnaitė & Indrė
Valantinaitė.
The second double-issue of Shearsman magazine for 2017 contains
poetry by Martin Anderson, Daragh Breen, Carmen Bugan, Susie
Campbell, Chloe Carnezi, Rachael Clyne, Cathy Dreyer, Steve Ely,
Liam Ferney, Eiffel Gao, Lucy Hamilton, Ho Cheung Lee, John Levy,
Julie Maclean, John Phillips, Claire Potter, David Rushmer and
Helen Tookey, & translations of Philippe Jaccottet by Ian
Brinton, of Osip Mandelstam by Alistair Noon, of Naka Taro by
Andrew Houwen & Nihei Chikaku, and of Virgil by David
Hadbawnik.
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Shearsman (Paperback)
Kelvin Corcoran
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R402
R352
Discovery Miles 3 520
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The first issue of Shearsman magazine for 2017. Poetry by Dennis
Barone, James Bell, Marianne Burton, Makyla Curtis, Mark Dickinson,
Khaled Hakim, Caroline Hawkridge, Julie Irigaray, Sarah James,
Peter Larkin, John Levy, Rosanna Licari, Ann Matthews, David
Miller, Kate Miller, Michelle Penn, Frances Presley, Dikra Ridha,
Colin Campbell Robinson, Peter Robinson, Julie Sampson, Alexandra
Sashe, Nathan Shepherdson, Jennifer Spector and Steve Spence, plus
translations of Masayo Goshi by the auhor, Szymon Slomczynski by
Elzbieta Wojcik-Leese and of Menno Wigman by Judith Wilkinson.
"Facing West achieves true illuminations of the places and uses of
myth. Corcoran's lines balance impressively between sometimes
cryptic, aphoristic phrases and an orality encountered in song -and
in great poetry. Several poems are almost like screens with a
critical or philosophical text behind them; and the verse emerges
stranger, and stronger, for the incidents in other books it points
us to...The overall edifice in Facing West allows entrances by
prose passages -often, apparently, autobiographical; also
talismanic insertions from other tongues, sometimes acronyms and
street names. Yet, these often fragmentary structures develop as an
experiment in narrative across separate sections, they work as a
book. And in the end, nothing feels out of place." (Paschalis
Nikolaou)
In Sea Table Kelvin Corcoran brings it all back home. Not that it
was ever very far away, but for twenty years or more he has been
writing a lot of poetry concerning Greece and may have gained a
reputation as a specialist or travel-writing poet, both of which
would be wrong. Greece, both place and stories, was a lens onto our
present condition and its depths, and through that focus he
developed an essentially lyrical (meaning 'unashamedly poetry')
field as the basis for a move towards larger forms: monologue and
narrative, neither merely transcribed but re-invented every time
from a literal rendering of the life and the materials. The four
substantial sets in this book bring these extended skills to work
on a range of subjects: a personal health crisis and recovery told
as an underground descent and the return to intellectual light; a
light-hearted musical prance around various poets; a rhapsodic
rendering of the story of Glen Gould...And the last, the title-set,
"Sea Table", which re-engages Greece in a substantial and
remarkably sustained and eloquent sequence, a multiplied poetical
narrative of sea voyage and trading venture coming through
difficult and easy seas back to the home it started from, which the
present tense and the archaic past inhabit in harmony. -Peter Riley
The second issue of Shearsman magazine for 2015, this includes new
poetry by Juana Adcock, Astrid Alben, Carmen Bugan, Claire
Crowther, Ian Davidson, Mark Dickinson, Clayton Eshleman, Gerrie
Fellows, Samir Guglani, Lucy Hamilton, Lee Harwood, Dorothy Lehane,
David Miller, Helen Moore, Sabiyha Rasheed, Peter Riley, Jaime
Robles, Ian Seed, Aidan Semmens, Lucy Sheerman, Donna Stonecipher,
Janet Sutherland, Philip Terry, Helen Tookey, Elzbieta
Wojcik-Leese, Amy Wright and Tamar Yoseloff, and translations of
Philippe Jaccottet by Ian Brinton, Osip Mandelstam by Alistair
Noon, Winett de Rokha by J. Mark Smith and Marina Tsvetaeva by
Angela Livingstone.
The second issue of Shearsman magazine for 2013 contains poetry by
Theodoros Chiotis and Sophie Mayer, Patricia Debney, Carrie Etter,
Charlotte Faber, Kim Goldberg, Graham Hardie, Michael Haslam, Ralph
Hawkins, Jeremy Hooker, Alex Houen, Peter Hughes, John James, Maria
Jastrzebska, Kelly Malone, Marion McCready, Maureen McLane, George
Messo, Alistair Noon, Kat Peddie, Marthe Reed, Denise Riley, Antony
Rowland, Aidan Semmens, Lucy Sheerman, Simon Smith, Donna
Stonecipher, Nathan Thompson, John Welch and El?bieta Wojcik-Leese,
plus translations of Gezim Hajdari by Cristina Viti.
For the Greek Spring is a selection of Kelvin Corcoran's poetry
about Greece, combining new work with poems from his previous
collections. The poet's sustained engagement with Greece is evident
at every turn. Corcoran's project is a re-imagining and rethinking
of our cultural antecedents, which goes considerably beyond the
ready co-option of classical values into the pockets of ambitious
politicians and the familiar reaches of the academy. Corcoran has
developed an artful ventriloquism in which we're not only uncertain
of who may be speaking, but are ultimately persuaded that it
doesn't matter. The voice is poetry itself, first and last.
Hotel Shadow continues Kelvin Corcoran's remarkable poetic venture
begun with Melanie's Book in 1996; here, with characteristically
rich lyricism, Corcoran explores Greece ancient and modern.
Travelling out from the real Hotel Shadow in the low season, the
work encompasses: Aristomenes and the ethics of terror; paternal
affection; Xenophanes of Colophon; the origins of poetry itself and
a subsequent history; family mythology and the vagaries of DIY.
Corcoran's first collection since his New & Selected Poems in
2004, 'Backward Turning Sea' (i.e. the Mediterranean) shows the
author deepening his engagement with Greece, both ancient and
modern - but it is a place where contemporary politics can intrude,
disturbing the reverie. The collection also includes a number of
poems based on the author's fascination with the paintings of the
St Ives artist, Roger Hilton.
To accompany Lee Harwood's new Selected Poems, we offer also this
book-length collection of interviews with Harwood by his long-time
friend and admirer, Kelvin Corcoran - himself also a Shearsman
author. An invaluable opportunity to "hear" Harwood talking about
poetry and about his own work.
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