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'... the universal poet, servant of the medium, renewer of the
forms, discoverer of the nugget of harmony in the language of
ourselves.' Seamus Heaney 'He brings to Irish poetry an invaluable
chronicle of mixed allegiances and lost worlds of the ambiguities
of the colony and the defeats of victory. No one else has quite had
his themes; no one else has quite ventured on his enquiries.' Eavan
Boland Edited, with a new introduction, by acclaimed poets Michael
Longley and Frank Ormsby, Selected Poems is a testament to John
Hewitt's remarkable literary legacy, and a celebration of a unique,
compelling and still urgent voice in 20th century Irish poetry.
Michael Longley's prose centres on poetry. This is so, even when he
is writing autobiographically, or reflecting on war and memory, or
enthusing about music and painting. Since Longley writes relatively
little criticism, readers of his poetry have lacked access to his
aesthetic thinking. Sidelines fills the gap by assembling prose
that ranges from his (often-combative) youthful poetry reviews, to
the lectures he gave as Ireland Professor of Poetry. Among the
poets Longley discusses are Homer, Propertius, Louis MacNeice,
Robert Graves, James Wright, Ian Hamilton Finlay and Ruth Stone.
Sidelines, which includes interviews with Longley, not only
illuminates his own work. Longley's perspectives on modern poetry
are both distinctive and important. He is also uniquely qualified
to interpret the phenomenon of poetry from Northern Ireland. Cover
Image: My Father in the Cottage, Sarah Longley
Helen Lewis' acclaimed memoir, A Time to Speak (Blackstaff Press,
Belfast, 1997), tells the story of the first thirty years of her
life in Czechoslovakia, from childhood to her professional training
as a choreographer and dancer. It also contains her devastating
account of Nazi persecution, of loss and suffering in the
Holocaust: Helen came very close to death. Maddy Tongue now
completes the story of this extraordinary woman who overcame
unimaginable suffering to become a creative force in Ireland. The
author's friendship with Helen lasted for more than fifty years. As
a dancer she performed in many of Helen's significant works.
Shadows Behind the Dance describes Helen's creative approach, her
struggle to overcome an Irish indifference to modern dance, her
pursuit of perfection and her unshakeable belief in humanity. In
Ireland today the presence of modern dance owes much to her
innovative teaching and practice. Shadows Behind the Dance is
supplemented with Chris Agee's 2002 interview with Helen, "An Irish
Epilogue", and a folio of Holocaust poems and drawings by Michael
Longley and Sarah Longley (who was a pupil of Helen's). Helen's
sons, Robin and Michael, have also written a Foreword. The book has
been generously funded through subscription by family, friends,
colleagues and admirers of the unforgettable Helen Lewis.
**WINNER OF THE 2022 FELTRINELLI INTERNATIONAL POETRY PRIZE ** 'One
of the most perfect poets alive. There is something in his work
both ancient and modern. I read him as I might check the sky for
stars.' Sebastian Barry Michael Longley's new collection takes its
title from Dylan Thomas - 'for the sake of the souls of the slain
birds sailing'. The Slain Birds encompasses souls, slayings and
many birds, both dead and alive. The first poem laments a tawny owl
killed by a car. That owl reappears later in 'Totem', which
represents the book itself as 'a star-surrounded totem pole/ With
carvings of all the creatures'. 'Slain birds' exemplify our impact
on the creatures and the planet. But, in this book's cosmic
ecological scheme, birds are predators too, and coronavirus is 'the
merlin we cannot see'. Longley's soul-landscape seems increasingly
haunted by death, as he revisits the Great War, the Holocaust and
Homeric bloodshed, with their implied counterparts today. Yet his
microcosmic Carrigskeewaun remains a precarious 'home' for the
human family. It engenders 'Otter-sightings, elvers, leverets,
poetry'. Among Longley's images for poetry are crafts that conserve
or recycle natural materials: carving, silversmithing, woodturning,
embroidery. This suggests the versatility with which he remakes his
own art. Two granddaughters 'weave a web from coloured strings' and
hang it up 'to trap a big idea'. The interlacing lyrics of The
Slain Birds are such a web.
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Michael Viney's Natural World
Michael Viney; Foreword by Michael Longley
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Archipelago Anthology (Paperback)
Alice Oswald, Kathleen Jamie, Robert Macfarlane, Sinead Morrisey, Andrew McNeillie, …
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R699
R655
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Archipelago is one of the most important and influential literary
magazines of the last twenty years. Running to twelve editions, it
was edited by scholar-poet Andrew McNeillie, with the assistance
later of James McDonald Lockhart, and began as an attempt to
reimagine the relationships between the islands of Ireland and
Britain. Archipelago has brought together established and emerging
artists in creative conversations that have transformed the study
of islands, coasts and waterways. It journeys from the Shetlands to
Cornwall, from the Aran Islands to the coast of Yorkshire, tracing
the cultures of diverse zones through some of the best in
contemporary writing about place and people. This collection
gathers poetry, prose and visual art in clusters grouped around the
Irish and British archipelago, with contributions from an array of
significant artists. With fifty contributors, Archipelago: A Reader
includes: Moya Cannon is an Irish poet with seven published
collections, the most recent being Collected Poems (2021). Deirdre
Ni Chonghaile is a graduate of the University of Oxford and
University College Cork. She is associated with NUI, Galway, and
the University of Notre Dame, and is known for her work in music
studies. Tim Dee is a naturalist, BBC radio producer and author of
The Running Sky (2018). Seamus Heaney (1939-2013) was born in
Northern Ireland. His career included teaching at Harvard and
Oxford. He received many awards including the Nobel Prize in
Literature, 1995. Kathleen Jamie is a Scottish writer whose work
has appeared internationally. She has taught poetry at the
University of Stirling since 2010. Michael Longley is a Northern
Irish poet, and winner of the Whitbread Poetry Prize, the
Hawthornden Prize, and the PEN Pinter Prize in 2017. Robert
Macfarlane is a Writing Fellow of Emmanuel College, Cambridge. He
has won the EM Forster Award for Literature. Derek Mahon
(1941-2020) was a Northern Irish poet. He won the David Cohen Prize
for Literature and the Poetry Now Award. Andrew McNeillie is a
Welsh poet and current Literature Editor at Oxford University
Press. His memoir An Aran Keening was published by The Lilliput
Press, and he is founder of the Clutag Press and publisher of the
Archipelago series. Sinead Morrisey is a Northern Irish winner of
the T.S. Eliot Prize and the Forward Poetry Prize. She has taught
in Belfast and Newcastle. 'Archipelago met and extended my own
strong sense that there was a need to turn the compass-rose of some
storytelling and art in Britain and Ireland away from the south and
east and towards the north and west; away from the metropolis and
towards the margins.' -Robert Macfarlane
*AN IRISH TIMES BOOK OF THE YEAR* 'I can't bear the thought of a
world without Michael Longley, yet his poetry keeps hurtling
towards that fact more and more urgently as it stretches in an
unflinching way beyond comfort or certainty.' So wrote Maria
Johnston, reviewing Longley's previous book Angel Hill. Yet The
Candlelight Master does not only face into shadows. The title poem
sums up the chiaroscuro of this collection, named after a
mysterious Baroque painter. Other poems about painters - Matisse,
Bonnard - imply that age makes the quest for artistic perfection
all the more vital. A poem addressed to the eighth-century Japanese
poet, Otomo Yakamochi, says: 'We gaze on our soul-landscapes / More
intensely with every year.' The soul-landscape of The Candlelight
Master is often a landscape of memory. But if Longley looks back
over formative experiences, and over the forms he has given them,
he channels memory into freshly fluid structures. His new poems
about war and the Holocaust speak to our own dark times.
Translation brings dead poets up to date too. The bawdy of Catullus
becomes Scots 'Hochmagandy'. Yakamochi and the lyric poets of
Ancient Greece find themselves at home in Longley's Carrigskeewaun.
Two poets, a playwright and a novelist - Michael Longley, Eavan
Boland, Frank McGuiness and Anita Desai - explore in these essays
aspects of the imaginative process as each has experienced it: four
major writers, four sensibilities, four ways of seeing creativity
and its contexts. MICHAEL LONGLEY writes with remarkable candour of
his years - 1970 to 1991 - as arts administrator in Northern
Ireland. Transforming anecdote into parable, this noted poet
measures the cost of 'trying to remain true to yourself facing the
"dark tower"' while being part of an essential but often
soul-destroying bureaucracy. EAVAN BOLAND, merging the personal and
the theoretical, contends that the place of women as writers in
Irish society have been shaped by a ' fusion of the national and
the feminine'. FRANK MCGUINESS, the internationally acclaimed
playwright, offers a radically innovative reading of Oscar Wilde's
De Profundis, while calling into being the material contexts of
creativity - in this instance, a prison cell. The Indian novelist
ANITA DESAI looks at her country's colonial heritage and a shared
background that gave rise to the work of Nobel Laureate
Rabindranath Tagore and the film-maker Satyajit Ray. Her
fascinating lecture shows how a vibrant indigenous culture, coming
into fruitful contact with the West at the end of the nineteenth
century, blossomed into artistic creation - yielding parallels with
Ireland.
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Angel Hill (Paperback)
Michael Longley
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R308
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A Guardian / Herald Scotland Book of the Year Winner of the 2017
PEN Pinter prize Shortlisted for the 2017 Forward Prize A remote
townland in County Mayo, Carrigskeewaun has been for nearly fifty
years Michael Longley's home-from-home, his soul-landscape. Its
lakes and mountains, wild animals and flowers, its moody seas and
skies have for decades lit up his poetry. Now they overflow into
Angel Hill, his exuberant new collection. In addition, Longley has
been exploring Lochalsh in the Western Highlands where his daughter
the painter Sarah Longley now lives with her family. She has opened
up for him her own soul-landscape with its peculiar shapes and
intense colours. In Angel Hill the imaginations of poet and painter
intermingle and two exacting wildernesses productively overlap.
Love poems and elegies and heart-rending reflections on the Great
War and the Northern Irish Troubles add further weight to Michael
Longley's outstanding eleventh collection. Angel Hill will
undoubtedly delight this great poet's many admirers.
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Selected Poems (Paperback, Main)
Louis MacNeice; Edited by Edna Longley, Michael Longley
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R384
R345
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'I would have a poet able bodied, fond of talking, a reader of the
newspapers, capable of pity and laughter, informed in economics,
appreciative of women, involved in personal relationships, actively
interested in politics, susceptible to physical impressions.' Louis
MacNeice's prescription is designed to look ordinary, rather than
esoteric, but very little poetry can claim to meet these
specifications, stringent in their very wideness. MacNeice's work
matches the world he famously described as 'incorrigibly plural.'
Michael Longley, himself a distinguished Ulster poet, has written
an introductory essay of meticulous advocacy. His wife, the critic
Edna Longley, has supplied the apparatus for students and the
general reader.
Brendan Kennelly (1936-2021) was one of Ireland's most popular and
prolific poets. Over five decades he wrote thousands of poems
published in over 30 books of poetry, including three previous
editions of Selected Poems. Published on his 75th birthday, this
new selection presents just over a hundred of Kennelly's most
essential poems, accompanied by an audio CD of his own readings
drawn from two classic recordings made in Dublin in 1982 and 1999.
The Essential Brendan Kennelly has been edited by two lifelong
admirers of his work. Like Kennelly, Terence Brown, Emeritus
Professor of Anglo-Irish Literature, studied at Trinity College
Dublin, and taught there for most of life. After studying at
Trinity College, Michael Longley went on to become one of Ireland's
leading poets and was Ireland Professor of Poetry in 2007-10.
Louis MacNeice was born in Belfast in 1907 and educated at
Marlborough and Merton College, Oxford. For most of his working
life he was a writer and producer for BBC radio. His death in 1963
was sudden and unexpected.
One Wide Expanse is the first volume in The Poet's Chair series,
which will publish the public lectures of the Ireland Professors of
Poetry. The Ireland Chair of Poetry was established in 1998
following the award of the Nobel Prize of Literature to Seamus
Heaney and is supported by Queen's University Belfast, Trinity
College Dublin, University College Dublin, the Arts Council of
Northern Ireland and the Arts Council/An Chomhairle Ealaion. The
next two volumes will contain the lectures of Harry Clifton and
Paula Meehan. This series follows on from the publication of the
lectures of John Montague, Nuala Ni Dhomhnaill and Paul Durcan in
The Poet's Chair, published in 2008. In this volume, the
distinguished Irish poet Michael Longley - whose poetry has
transcended political and cultural boundaries throughout his career
- reflects on what has influenced his craft. Longley opens with an
'autobiography in poetry' where he recounts the poets and poems
that have influenced him as both a reader and writer of poetry. He
discusses his intimate relationship with Derek Mahon and Seamus
Heaney along with other poets from around the world.The second
lecture explores how influential the classical literatures of
Greece and Rome have been on English poetry, highlighting how he
has used these literatures in his own work, often to portray the
Troubles in his native Northern Ireland. Longley closes with a very
personal discussion of the influence that the west of Ireland has
had on his poetry, his life, and his 'spiritual education'. The
poet's love of nature and the environment shines through and
extracts from his poems portray his deep understanding of the West.
This illuminating volume gives readers a rare insight into the
creative process of one of Ireland's leading contemporary poets who
was Ireland Professor of Poetry from 2007 to 2010.
Winner of the 2015 Griffin Poetry Prize Shortlisted for the 2014
T.S. Eliot Prize In The Stairwell, his tenth collection, Michael
Longley's themes and forms reach a new intensity. The second part
of the book is a powerful sequence of elegies for his twin brother,
Peter, and the dominant mood elsewhere is elegiac. The title poem
begins: 'I have been thinking about the music for my funeral ...'
The two parts are also linked by Homer. Longley is well-known for
his Homeric versions, and the Iliad is a presiding presence - both
in poems about the Great War and in the range of imagery that gives
his twin's death a mythic dimension. Yet funeral music can be
life-affirming. Longley has built this collection on intricate
doublings, not only when he explores the tensions of twinship. The
psychologically suggestive word 'stairwell' is itself an ambiguous
compound. These poems encompass birth as well as death, childhood
and age, nature and art, the animal and human worlds, tenderness
and violence, battlefield and 'homeland'. The Stairwell is a richly
textured, immensely moving work. Michael Longley has the rare
ability to fuse emotional depth with complicated artistry: to make
them, somehow, the same thing.
In his newest volume, named for the Japanese idea that the best
water for tea is melted snow, Michael Longley once again
demonstrates that he is one of the best nature poets writing in
English. Even in elegies, eulogies, and friendship verse, Longley's
ability to find the right natural image with which to communicate
his fellow feelings is striking. His subtle ministrations allow us
to capture "our own little cumulus of exhalations."
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