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Ask two poets what their first drafts look like, and you’ll get
wildly different answers. From typed pages with delicate annotation
to hasty scribbles in a dog-eared notebook, drafts can tell us so
much more about poems – and their poets – than their final,
published versions. Diverse themes including love, inequality, and
the natural world bring together some of the most culturally
significant and emotionally affecting poems in the British
Library’s collections and beyond. These carefully selected drafts
are written on materials ranging from school exercise books to
mulberry bark to Holloway prison toilet paper. They include not
only English and American poetry, but also drafts in Amharic,
Chinese, Dutch, French, German, Japanese, Persian, Thai and
Sanskrit. Expert commentary explains the provenance of the
manuscripts, as well as the secrets they reveal about the writing
process. Previously unpublished early drafts by practising poets
including Benjamin Zephaniah, Simon Armitage, Pascale Petit and
Hollie McNish are accompanied by new reflections from the poets
themselves on their inspiration and craft.
This unique resource comprises a therapeutic workbook and
storybook, designed to be used as an early intervention with
children within the school setting who display concerning sexual
behaviour. The workbook contains a series of activities with
accompanying user-friendly advice including how to broach difficult
subjects, how to engage with children who have additional needs and
how to create conditions of safety to enable the necessary
conversations and activities to happen. The programme of work
culminates in the creation of a unique and dynamic Safety Plan
which is developed collaboratively with the child (as the expert)
together with key adults in their lives. The Safety Plan is
designed to meet the needs of the child and gives attention to
their cultural context and specific likes/interests; this
ultimately keeps them and other children safe from further
incidents or allegations of sexually concerning behavior. The
accompanying storybook, 'Billy and the Tingles' employs narrative
therapy, telling the story of a child with sexually concerning
behaviour and addressing contemporary issues of exposure to
pornography.
Poetry. BIRD BOOK is written in collaboration with a field guide to
North American birds. Each page both borrows and departs from
language found in an individual bird entry. The resulting text is
an investigation into dissolved and dissolving narrative, into the
permeable boundaries between "human" and "natural," and into the
partial and shifting nature of narrative and memory themselves,
"wet and traveling maps." Here, as in bird song, gap and repetition
create their own story. To welcome "accidental field," "to take the
songbird out of your mouth," to examine the ever-shifting
relationship between what we receive and what we project, is to
move through a porous and shared space, affecting and affected,
where "yellow spectacle" hovers over "a suggested house":
"exuberant ground."
"Laura Walker's atlas is sung and wrung out of a deep listening to
every word, and this is rare. The poems are full of dirt, weeds and
butternut squash, but even if the place from which (not of which)
Walker writes were full of skyscrapers or stripmalls, her
connection to her language and her materials would be as
particular, as true. Such singularity of connection (actual!) opens
the field of meaning and experience for the reader coming into it,
to gather and move, to suffer in spells and flower 'in the greening
and the sound.'"--Lisa Fishman, author of "The Happiness
Experiment"
Praise for previous work:
"There is an intimate lilt, an indelible charm, a bygone
narrator...in Laura Walker's elegant collection. Her tangibility of
voice seems to know a listener. Conversation dares with an undone
presence. In other words, you can put your feet up. You can find
shade."--Laynie Browne, "Poetry Project Newsletter"
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Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
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R205
R164
Discovery Miles 1 640
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