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To write about the North West coast is to do battle with the
tenacity of stereotype. It is to dodge well-worn evocations of
depressed, down-at-heel seaside towns, gaudy sea-front arcades,
Ferris wheels, roller coasters and caravan parks and of
past-their-best Lakeland towns with stunning views and grim
prospects. To write about these places is to somehow acknowledge a
variety of well publicised truths about the social and economic
struggles of neglected and disenfranchised populations and also to
dig deeper - to find the views and perspectives that surprise and
make strange. No collection, even one including writers as varied
and accomplished at the ones you'll meet in this anthology, could
claim to provide a complete, exhaustive account of a region which
encompasses hundreds of miles of coastline with centuries of
complex history, a myriad of urban and natural habitats, and the
entire available spectrum of human experience. Under these grey
skies and rain-spotted sands lurk teeming hidden myriad of secret
wildlife. Yet the stories included in Seaside Special succeed in
gifting us readers with `postcards from the edge.' These ten
writers, some of them established and some being published here for
the first time, answer the challenge to `surprise and make strange'
in an array of startling, often discomforting and most of all vivid
glimpses of some of the lives and landscapes contained in this
stretch of coast.
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Parnassus (Paperback)
David Constantine, Helen Constantine; Illustrated by Lucy Wilkinson
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R292
Discovery Miles 2 920
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This issue will be largely given over to a collaboration with
'Poetry Parnassus' - the Southbank Centre's celebration of the 2012
London Olympics. Poets from all participating countries will be
invited to London and MPT will publish a selection of translations
of their poems. Poetry Parnassus marks the first time that so many
poets from so many parts of the planet have convereged in one
place; it is a monumental poetic happening worthy of the spirit and
history of the Olympics. 'My hunch is this will be the biggest
poetry event ever - a truly global coming together of poets' (Simon
Armitage, the poet behind the idea and Artist in Residence at
Southbank Centre) The issue will be enhanced with other translated
poems, brief essays, anecdotes and images concerned, in whatever
fashion, with the Games (ancient or modern) or with Parnassus, home
of the Muses. Parnassus was a sacred site for the whole Greek
world; Delphi, below that mountain, was 'the navel of the earth';
for the duration of the Olympics a truce was declared so that
athletes could come and go safely. The modern Olympics are world -
wide. MPT 3/17 will be just as extensive and various.
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