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A series of murders targets the nation's best known poets.
Remarkably, they are being murdered in a way that reflects the
style of their poems. Victor Priest is given the task of finding
the murderer but when a car bomb is discovered in his car, by the
eccentric and hilarious young couple turned detectives, a desperate
confrontation takes place
Shadow of the Owl is Matthew Sweeney's final collection, bringing
together the poems he wrote during a year of debilitating illness.
He died from Motor Neuron Disease in 2018 shortly after publishing
My Life as a Painter, written before he became ill, but - like all
his previous collections - preparation for this final work. In a
sequence of dark fables, a hapless figure is hounded by a
procession of invisible enemies who want him dead. These jokers -
kidnappers, assassins, liars all - have many methods at their
disposal, from crucifixion or hanging to bombing or mauling by
crocodile... A menacing owl comes to the garden each night for
twelve nights, but refuses to deliver its devastating news. All of
Sweeney's verve and spiky humour are present in these last poems,
following, as always, the unnerving logic of dreams. But the dream
has become a nightmare, and the catastrophe, impending in all the
earlier collections, has now come to pass. The man on the run needs
to reach new heights of ingenuity, if he is to escape, repeatedly,
the most horrible of deaths. The poet is writing for his life. For
more than forty years Matthew Sweeney sought to capture, in poetry,
the life of a body menaced and condemned to wander in a terrifying
place - but a body fully alive to the sensuous pleasures of the
world, and the vulnerability of exposure to its loss. His final
poems are imbued with a lyrical beauty and great sadness at leaving
that world just as the spirit was burning as brightly as ever.
Matthew Sweeney's eleventh collection of poems is haunted by
mortality, by other worlds and far-flung places, by visitations and
violent events like the Spanish Inquisition. The poems are
imaginative riffs featuring troubling companions and troublesome
thoughts: ghosts and spirits, anger and guilt, crows and horses, a
runaway calf and a footballing elephant. And yet amid the
outlandish adventures and macabre musings in Inquisition Lane,
other notes are also sounded: the poems can be lyrical as well as
exuberant, saddened as well as extravagant. Dear friends are
remembered. Faith is questioned. The Catholic Church is
interrogated. German monks zoom by on Harley-Davidsons and
chocolate is mined by French monks beneath the Madeleine in Paris.
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Horse Music (Paperback)
Matthew Sweeney
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R293
R233
Discovery Miles 2 330
Save R60 (20%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Matthew Sweeney's tenth collection of poems is as sinister as its
dark forebears, but the notes he hits in "Horse Music" are lyrical
and touching as well as disturbing and disquieting. Confronting him
in these imaginative riffs are not just the perplexing animals and
folklorish crows familiar from his earlier books, but also magical
horses, ghosts, dwarfs and gnomes. Central to the book are a group
of Berlin poems - introducing us to, among things, the birds of
Chamissoplatz who warn of coming ecological disaster, or the horses
who swim across the Wannsee to pay homage to Heinrich von Kleist in
his grave. Many poems in the book range freely across the borders
of realism into an alternative realism, while others stay within
what Elizabeth Bishop called 'the surrealism of everyday life' -
such as a tale about Romanian gypsies removing bit by bit an
abandoned car. "Horse Music" is not only Matthew Sweeney's most
adventurous book to date, it is also his most varied, including not
only outlandish adventures and macabre musings, but also moving
responses to family deaths - balanced by a poem to a newborn,
picturing the strange new world that will unfold for her. That
strange world unfolds for us too in the eerie poems of Horse Music.
Poetry Book Society Recommendation.
Emergency Kit is an anthology with many differences. It is, to
begin with, a book which gives prominence to poems rather than to
the poets who wrote them. It is truly international, bringing
together poems not just from these islands but from many parts of
the English-speaking world. It is the first book to identify a
strain in the poetry of the last half-century which is
characteristic of the 'strange times' we live in - an age when, as
the editors note, scientific discovery itself has encouraged us to
'make free with the boundaries of realism'. It values imagination,
surprise, vivid expression, the outlandish and the playful above
ideology and sententiousness. It is, in short, living proof that
poetry in the English language continues to thrive and to matter.
Matthew Sweeney's palette in My Life as a Painter - his twelfth
collection - features a wild mix of birds and animals: lizards,
snakes, rats, camels, donkeys, feral cats, dogs and owls. One dog
transmits telepathic requests for the food he wants, and there's a
parrot who speaks as ambassador for the bird world. Sweeney's
canvas here is the transhuman: where boundaries between human and
non-human can't be fixed, dreams turn into torments, secrets stay
hidden, strange communiques remain unclear, and the natural
weirdness of his native Donegal verges on the surreal. There are
poems ostensibly about art, artists and filmmaking which are as
much portraits of the poet and the difficulties of writing poetry.
Other poems offer oblique perspectives on religion, warfare,
migration and displacement; or go off at a tangent to explore the
imaginative possibilities of everything from Michigan's Mullett
Lake and the geysers of Iceland to rope-ladders, tin-mines, a giant
blue cabbage and an old thrown-out Christmas tree.
Matthew Sweeney wrote this set of 50 prose poems in response to
Baudelaire's posthumously published collection of prose poems (or
petits poemes en prose, as he called them). Modelling his pieces as
closely as possible on Baudelaire's, Sweeney has produced a
sequence that is wide-ranging in both subject and mood - there are
stories, parables, meditations, diatribes that are, by turns,
quirky, reflective, ascerbic and funny - the overall effect of
which is an evocative autobiographical snapshot of his life in
Paris. This unusual and unexpected collection from Matthew Sweeney
is a significant addition to his already outstanding body of work.
"Matthew Sweeney's King of a Rainy Country finds its genetic
triggers in Baudelaire's Le Spleen de Paris. But the lifeblood
comes from Sweeney's own explorations around the city where
pleasure, novelty and violence collide to offer, in Balzac's
phrase, 'gastronomy for the eye'. Replete with food, along with
wine, jazz, animals, misfits and ghosts, these poemes en prose are
full of drollery and invention, and not a little devilment (indeed
the Devil turns up memorably). "Written in the months following the
terrorist attacks of November 2015, the book not only portrays
today's Paris, it makes for a wry self- portrait whereby the props
and obsessions of Sweeney's poems consort companionably in prose's
more temperate medium. King of a Rainy Country, with its faceted
crystal-sharp narratives, is destined to join those classics
inspired by the dangerous allure of the great city." - Maurice
Riordan
A comprehensive guide to writing poetry Write Poetry - and Get it
Published is a user-friendly and comprehensive guide written by two
well-published poets that will prove indispensible if you're
seeking creative guidance, inspiration and practical advice.
Covering everything from mood, style and tone to poetry on the
internet, this fully updated edition will help you find your voice.
Containing straightforward advice and the very latest on prizes,
festivals and performance poetry, this book will enable an aspiring
or seasoned poet alike to gain the confidence and necessary
knowledge to write and publish compelling poetry. Write Poetry and
Get it Published includes: Chapter 1: What does it take to be a
poet? Chapter 2: Bump-starting the poem Chapter 3: A challenge to
the reader: groundwork exercises Chapter 4: Getting started:
working arrangements Chapter 5: I gotta use words when I talk to
you Chapter 6: Letters, alphabets and lists Chapter 7: Visualizing
Chapter 8: Drafting and revision Chapter 9: Using models Chapter
10: The co-operative approach Chapter 11: Subject matter Chapter
12: Context, mood and tone Chapter 13: Writing in different modes
Chapter 14: Style Chapter 15: Getting the rhymes to chose you
Chapter 16: It don't mean a thing if it ain't got that swing
Chapter 17: Translation Chapter 18: Writing for children Chapter
19: Getting published Chapter 20: ipoems and cyber verse Chapter
21: Reading aloud Chapter 22: Poetry prizes and festivals Chapter
23: ars poetica ABOUT THE SERIES The Teach Yourself Creative
Writing series helps aspiring authors tell their story. Covering a
range of genres from science fiction and romantic novels, to
illustrated children's books and comedy, this series is packed with
advice, exercises and tips for unlocking creativity and improving
your writing. And because we know how daunting the blank page can
be, we set up the Just Write online community at tyjustwrite, for
budding authors and successful writers to connect and share.
The poems in A Smell of Fish connect and radiate like the spokes of
a wheel: haiku, sestinas, poems beginning with a line by somebody
else or sparked off by foreign travel, a version of Dante, a sea
sequence set on the Suffolk coast, and - long overdue - Matthew
Sweeney's own version of the old Irish poem where his namesake is
turned into a bird. In this, his seventh collection, we are back in
a world where all explanations are withheld. 'If Beckett and Kafka
come to mind', as Sean O'Brien wrote in his essay on Sweeney in The
Deregulated Muse, 'they are not simply influences but kindred
imaginations'. So we encounter a valley mysteriously filling with
the smell of fish, second-world-war planes reappearing over London,
a secret attic mural of a naked ex-lover, a cosmonaut abandoned on
the moon, and a subterranean tunnel that runs the length of
Ireland. Whatever the subject, we are in the confident hands of one
of the most imaginatively gifted poets now writing.
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