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Salt Book of Younger Poets [Minkštas viršelis]

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  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 240 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 216x135x18 mm, Not illustrated
  • Išleidimo metai: 15-Oct-2011
  • Leidėjas: Salt Publishing
  • ISBN-10: 190777310X
  • ISBN-13: 9781907773105
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 240 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 216x135x18 mm, Not illustrated
  • Išleidimo metai: 15-Oct-2011
  • Leidėjas: Salt Publishing
  • ISBN-10: 190777310X
  • ISBN-13: 9781907773105
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
The Salt Book of Younger Poets showcases a new generation of British poets born since the mid-80s. Many of these poets embrace new technologies such as blogs, social networking and webzines to meet, mentor, influence and publish their own work and others. Some poets here were winners of the Foyle young poet awards when at school. Some have published pamphlets in series such as tall-lighthouse Pilot and Faber New Poets. All of them are working away on first collections. This is a chance to encounter the poets who will dominate UK poetry in years to come.

Recenzijos

Lumsden hosts a supremely eclectic party for 85 "new" British and Irish poets more women than men, for once whose newness turns on book-length debuts within the past 15 years rather than calendar age. -- Boyd Tonkin * The Independent * Identity Parade is an anthology which clearly achieves its objective of introducing its audience to a broad-church of todays talent. -- Phil Brown * Hand + Star * This ambitious anthology offers a rewarding glimpse into the health of current poetry, bringing together 50 poets aged from 18 to 26 who have yet to publish their first full-length collection. Its a coup for the editors to have found work of such potential. What is immediately striking is the extraordinary range and variety presented here, from the colloquial energy and playfulness of Ashna Sarkar (Trawlerman is the most southerly chippie in North Weezy / to do chips with onion gravy) to Andrew Jamisons mock-casual meditation on Northern Irish life (touching down to a province of politics / wed call it something else if there was a word for it), from Oli Hazzards deft Ashbery-influenced manoeuvres to Jay Bernards compelling 11.16, which bitterly reworks graffiti in a station toilet to evoke Larkins famous opening lines: They fuck you up the government / You may not know it but they see / That youre a mug and so youll spend / Nine grand on what they got for free. -- Charles Bainbridge * The Guardian * The 10 Best Valentines gifts. Poetry is always a winner. This anthology showcases the new crop of young British poets and runs the gamut from lovey-dovey stuff to verses about technology. -- Samuel Muston * The Independent * What is most lovely to see in the Salt anthology is a wide range of well-written experimental poetry. Rachael Allen produces some stunningly controlled prose poems under that heading. Phil Brown plays with an impressive crossword poem, entitled Diptych. Amy DeAth writes tongue-tripping poems reminiscent of free association, setting up meaningful sound echoes that work the brain and are pleasant on the ear. Witness this from Poetry for Boys. At the other end of the scale, poets such as Emily Tesh, Jack Underwood, James Brooks, Ben Wilkinson and Dai George are writing lavish, well-executed and fairly conventional lyrics that seek to communicate directly with the reader. Jack Belloli, too, wants to speak clearly, to be both accurate and resonant with language (Yurt). Sarah Howe is another original. Her poems surprise and hotwire themselves into your brain as you read. -- Jane Holland * Poetry Society * The Salt Book of Younger Poets is both valuable, as an introduction to future big names and an indication of trends in the most contemporary poetry, and enjoyable, as an anthology of intelligent and energetic writing. -- Tess Somervell * Tower Poetry * The writing is assured, erudite and beautifully crafted. It is effortless to read, by which I mean that it is accessible the poets are too good not to be clear, they do not need to impress by obfuscation and obscurity, but communicate directly, as good writing should, to the intellect, the emotions and the senses.

This collection should be an inspiration to older students considering English at degree levels, and also to those who wish to write. The poets here are a demonstration of what is possible, given wide-ranging, hard work and talent, and an introduction to the ways in which new voices can be heard, not just via the excellent publication cited here, but also through websites on which writers such as these, their ideas and work in progress will be easily accessible. -- Frank Startup * School Librarian *

Foreword xiii
Roddy Lumsden
Introduction xv
Eloise Stonborough
Rachael Allen
The Dolls
1(1)
Impotence
2(1)
from 4chan Poems
2(1)
Rag Bird
3(2)
Dan Barrow
An Inheritance
5(1)
2nd June 1916
6(1)
Edge
6(1)
From Even Ashes
7(2)
Jack Belloli
Yurt
9(1)
Loquation
10(1)
On Completing a Pocket Jigsaw of "The FightingTemeraire"
11(2)
Jay Bernard
Migration
13(2)
Tuesday Morning
15(1)
11.16
16(2)
Penny Boxall
Penny-farthing
18(1)
Navigavi
19(2)
Williams, Who Lived
21(1)
Taxidermy Outpost
22(1)
James Brookes
Opiates: Kaliningrad
23(1)
Hierophantic Head of Mao, Hunan Province
24(1)
In Clitheroe Keep I
24(1)
The English Sweats
25(2)
Phil Brown
South Bank
27(1)
Gamla Minnen
28(1)
Diptych
29(1)
Sir Gawain on the Northern Line
30(2)
Niall Campbell
After the Creel Fleet
32(1)
Bank Holiday
33(1)
The Tear in the Sack
34(1)
Hitching Lifts from Islanders
34(1)
The Apple
35(1)
Kayo Chingonyi
Gnosis
36(1)
Fist of the North Star
37(1)
Guide to Proper Mixtape Assembly
38(1)
Some Bright Elegance
38(2)
Miranda Cichy
Bear
40(1)
Badminton
41(1)
Mackerel Sky
42(1)
The Grecian Widows
43(1)
John Clegg
Moss
44(1)
Kayaks
45(1)
Luz
45(1)
Antler
46(1)
Tribe
47(1)
Nia Davies
A History of the Ophicleide
48(1)
Transit Hours
49(1)
Harbour Bell
49(1)
Periphylla Periphylla
50(1)
Turning Edge
51(2)
Amy De'ath
Sonnet
53(1)
Poetry for Boys
54(5)
Inua Ellams
Of all the boys of Plateau Private School
59(2)
Portrait of Prometheus as a Basketball Player
61(1)
GuerrillaGardenWritingPoem
62(2)
Charlotte Geater
Moro
64(1)
Grotesquerie
65(1)
Not Goodbye
66(1)
Squalor
66(2)
Dai George
New Translation
68(1)
Plans with the Unmet Wife
69(2)
Metropolis
71(1)
Distraction During Evensong
71(2)
Tom Gilliver
The Graft
73(1)
This Feather Stirs
74(1)
Talking Back
75(1)
Before We Thaw
75(1)
Emily Hasler
Cake Fork
76(1)
Wet Season
77(1)
The Cormorants
77(2)
On reading the meaning of "falchion" in an encyclopaedia
79(1)
Oli Hazzard
Moving In
80(1)
The Inability To Recall The Precise Word For Something
81(1)
Arrival
82(1)
Badlands
83(1)
Prelude To Growth
84(1)
Daniel Hitchens
Fruitbowl
85(1)
First Shave After Coma
86(1)
From Election 2010: A Poetic Review
87(2)
Sarah Howe
A Painting
89(1)
Faults Escaped
90(1)
Crocodile
91(1)
Chinoiserie
92(2)
Andrew Jamison
The Bus from Belfast
94(1)
The Starlings
95(1)
Death's Door
95(1)
Thinking About the Point of Things on a Spring Evening on the Killyleagh Road
96(3)
Annie Katchinska
The Twenty Third Minute
99(1)
Blue
100(1)
Toni Braxton
101(1)
February
102(1)
Andrew Mcmillan
from in my dreams you walk dripping from a sea journey on the highway across America
103(2)
Nabokov's butterflies
105(1)
6:30am
106(1)
obituary of a lesser East-European poet
106(1)
Siofra Mcsherry
L'etoile
107(1)
Faust
108(1)
Sleepless
109(1)
To a blackberry maggot
110(1)
Ben Maier
Gone Baby Gone
111(1)
Gall
112(1)
A Short History of Textiles
113(2)
Laura Marsh
The Winter Empress
115(1)
Mistakes in Closed Captioning
116(1)
Relics
116(1)
The Wife's Lament
117(1)
Apollo's Hyacinths
117(2)
Annabella Massey
A Gift of Lilies
119(1)
Istanbul
120(1)
Actress
121(3)
James Midgley
Butterfly Antennae
124(2)
Portrait of a Pig
126(1)
The Invention of Faces
127(1)
Harriet Moore
From Whalefall
128(3)
Bog Bodies
131(2)
The Ship of Theseus
133(1)
Helen Mort
Photography
134(1)
Against Sleep
135(3)
A Chaser for Miss Heath
138(1)
Charlotte Newman
Dancing Prize
139(1)
All That Jazz
140(1)
Still Births
140(4)
Richard O'Brien
Isthmus
144(2)
Moses in Medieval GLass
146(1)
Confessions of an Accidental Arsonist
146(2)
Richard Osmond
For the Nonce
148(1)
Bait and Switch
149(1)
Kunstkamera
150(1)
Anatomist
151(1)
Vidyan Ravinthiran
Ma
152(1)
Jump-cuts
153(1)
Recession
154(1)
Dot Dot Dot
155(1)
Sophie Robinson
Flesh Leggings
156(1)
Winded By Love
157(1)
Animal Hospital
157(1)
From SHE!
158(2)
Charlotte Runcie
Staying In
160(1)
The Seventh Winter
161(1)
Pope, Telescope
162(1)
Fur
162(1)
In my pocket
163(2)
Ashna Sarkar
Heartbeat
165(1)
Carry On Cutting
166(1)
The New Vince
166(1)
Setting Sun
167(1)
William Searle
Consider This
168(1)
The Daimon
169(1)
A Nocturnal Pact
170(1)
A Visit
170(2)
Colette Sensier
Toothlessness
172(1)
Orpheus
173(2)
Evolution
175(2)
Warsan Shire
Ugly
177(1)
Things we had lost in the summer
178(1)
Maymuun's Mouth
179(1)
Beauty
180(1)
Lavinia Singer
The Mapmaker's Daughter
181(2)
November
183(1)
The Anchorite
183(1)
Internal Memorandum
184(2)
Adham Smart
The New Mechanics
186(1)
Pumpkin Heart Boy
187(1)
O, Openmouthed, You Are One of Us
187(2)
Martha Sprackland
Plate
189(1)
Second Body
190(1)
The Gold
191(1)
Time Capsule
192(1)
Eloise Stonborough
Fugue State
193(1)
The Pharaoh's Embalmers
194(1)
The Mercy Glass
195(1)
Chaos
196(1)
Emily Tesh
At Sea
197(1)
(dona nobis pacem)
198(1)
Three Sonnets for a Girl
198(2)
Jack Underwood
And what do you do?
200(1)
Under
201(1)
My other girlfriends
201(1)
Consequences
202(1)
Certain
203(1)
Ahren Warner
Jardin du Luxembourg
204(1)
Pictogramme
205(1)
En gram
206(1)
Avis
206(1)
Epistle
207(1)
Ben Wilkinson
First Glance
208(1)
Filter
209(1)
Sunday
210(1)
The River Don
210(1)
Sophie Yeo
Love's Progress
211(1)
Poem
212(1)
Christmas, 1914
213(1)
Nocturne
213(4)
Acknowledgements 217
Roddy Lumsden (born 1966) is a Scottish poet, who was born in St Andrews. He has published five collections of poetry, a number of chapbooks and a collection of trivia, as well as editing a generational anthology of British and Irish poets of the 1990s and 2000s, Identity Parade. He lives in London where he teaches for The Poetry School. He died in January 2020.

James Brookes was born in 1986 and grew up in rural Sussex, a few minutes walk from Shelleys boyhood home of Field Place. He received a major Eric Gregory Award in 2009 and a Hawthornden International Writers Fellowship in 2011. He has published a pamphlet, The English Sweats, with Pighog Press and is currently the Williams Librarian at Cranleigh School in Surrey, where also he teaches. Sins of the Leopard is his first full collection.

Kayo Chingonyi was born in Zambia in 1987 and came to the UK in 1993. His poems have been published in a range of magazines and anthologies including The Best British Poetry 2011 and The Salt Book Of Younger Poets. He also travels regularly across the UK, and internationally, to give readings. His work has been described as full of contrast, deftly managed with a buoyant and musical hand (Poetry International Web)

John Clegg grew up in Cambridge and currently lives in Durham, where he is completing a PhD on the Eastern European influence in contemporary poetry. A selection of his poetry was included in The Salt Book of Younger Poets (2010).

Nia Davies was born in Sheffield in 1984. She studied English at the University of Sussex where she won the first Stanmer Prize for poetry. She writes poetry and fiction and works for Literature Across Frontiers www.lit-across-frontiers.org . Her poems have been published in several magazines and anthologies including the Salt Book of Younger Poets. She lives in London.

Amy DeAth was born in Suffolk in 1985. She studied at the University of East Anglia and in Philadelphia, US, before moving to Australia and then to London. Her poems have appeared in a wide variety of journals in the UK and US and will feature in the Salt Younger Poets 2011 anthology. She currently lives and works in London. This is her first book of poems.

Tom Gilliver was born in North Yorkshire in 1990. He is currently a graduate student at Christs College, Cambridge. In 2008 he was nominated for a Faber New Poets Award. This is his first poetry collection.

Emily Hasler was born in Felixstowe, Suffolk and studied at the University of Warwick for a BA in English Literature and Creative Writing and an MA in Romanticisms. She now lives in London. In 2009 she won second prize in the Edwin Morgan International Poetry Competition. Her poems have appeared in various publications, including the Rialto, Poetry Salzburg, Warwick Review and Horizon Review, and have been anthologised in Dove Release, Birdbook, Clinic 2 and Herbarium. Her poems will also appear in The Salt Book of Younger Poets and The Best British Poetry 2011. She is a regular poetry reviewer for Warwick Review.

HELEN MORT was born in Sheffield and grew up in Chesterfield. She has published two poetry collections, Division Street (2013), and No Map Could Show Them (2016), and one novel, Black Car Burning (2019). Her short story collection, Exire, was published by Wrecking Ball and she co-edited One For the Road: Pubs and Poetry (Smith-Doorstop) with Stuart Maconie. She teaches creative writing at Manchester Metropolitan University.

Colette Sensier is a prose writer and poet born in Brighton in 1988. She studied English at Kings College, Cambridge, and Creative Writing at UEA. Her debut poetry collection, Skinless, is published by Eyewear, and her poetry is also anthologised in The Salt Book of Younger Poets. She has completed a historical novel (with the help of mentoring from Bernardine Evaristo during a Spread the Word mentoring scheme) and a dramatic adaptation of a Shirley Jackson novel, and is working on new contemporary prose.

Jack Underwood was born in Norwich in 1984. He graduated from Norwich School of Art and Design in 2005 and is currently completing a PhD in Creative Writing at Goldsmiths College, where he also teaches English Literature and Creative Writing. He is a librettist, musician and co-edits the anthology series Stop Sharpening Your Knives. He won an Eric Gregory Award in 2007 and was named a Faber New Poet in 2009. His debut pamphlet was published by Faber in October 2009 and his poems also feature in Voice Recognition from Bloodaxe. He reviews for Ambit and Poetry London. He lives in Hackney.

Born in 1986, Ahren Warner grew up in Lincolnshire before moving to London. His first collection, Confer (Bloodaxe, 2011), was both a PBS Recommendation and shortlisted in the Forward Prizes. He was awarded an Eric Gregory Award in 2010 and an Arts Foundation Fellowship in 2012. Ahren's second collection of poems, Pretty, is published in June 2013 and is a PBS Recommendation. He is poetry editor of Poetry London.