Nothing Like Love by Jenny Joseph (Enitharmon Press) Snowbound House by Shane Seely (Anhinga Press) The Men from Praga by Anne Berkeley (Salt Modern Poets)Ī Village Life by Louise Glück (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)Įnd of the West by Michael Dickman (Copper Canyon Press)Ĭradle Song by Stacey Lynn Brown (C&R Press) How to Fall by Karen Annesen (Salt Modern Poets) Voice Recognition: 21 Poets for the 21st Century, edited byĬlare Pollard & James Byrne (Bloodaxe Books) Natural Mechanical by J O Morgan (CB Editions)Ĭold Spring in Winter by Valérie Rouzeau, translated byĬontinental Shelf by Fred D’Aguiar (Carcanet Press) What’s your favourite volume of 2009? Feel free to include your recommendations in the comments section. A huge thank you to the poets who gave me their choices for the year. I hope you will enjoy these recommendations and consider buying a few collections, pamphlets and anthologies published this year by a range of presses. Sandgrain and Hourglass, Penelope Shuttle What the Water Gave Me – Poems after Frida Kahlo ,Įdited by Bernardine Evaristo and Daljit Nagra The Everyday Wife, Philippa Yaa de Villiers Identity Parade: New British & Irish Poets, Marriott, Sam Meekings, Sinéad Morrissey, Daljit Nagra, Caitríona O’Reilly, Alice Oswald, Katherine Pierpoint, Clare Pollard, Jacob Polley, Diana Pooley, Richard Price, Sally Read, Deryn Rees-Jones, Neil Rollinson, Jacob Sam-la Rose, Antony Rowland, James Sheard, Zoë Skoulding, Catherine Smith, Jean Sprackland, John Stammers, Greta Stoddart, Sandra Tappenden, Tim Turnbull, Julian Turner, Mark Waldron, Ahren Warner, Tim Wells, Matthew Welton, David Wheatley, Sam Willetts, Samantha Wynne-Rhydderch and Tamar Yoseloff.Īre there any anthologies and collections you’re particularly looking forward to getting your hands on this year? Jackson, Anthony Joseph, Luke Kennard, Nick Laird, Sarah Law, Frances Leviston, Gwyneth Lewis, John McAuliffe, Chris McCabe, Helen Macdonald, Patrick McGuinness, Kona Macphee, Peter Manson, D.S. Identity Parade includes poetry from Patience Agbabi, Jonathan Asser, Tiffany Atkinson, Simon Barraclough, Paul Batchelor, Kate Bingham, Julia Bird, Patrick Brandon, David Briggs, Andy Brown, Judy Brown, Colette Bryce, Matthew Caley, Siobhan Campbell, Vahni Capildeo, Melanie Challenger, Kate Clanchy, Polly Clark, Julia Copus, Sarah Corbett, Claire Crowther, Tim Cumming, Ailbhe Darcy, Peter Davidson, Nick Drake, Sasha Dugdale, Chris Emery, Bernardine Evaristo, Paul Farley, Leontia Flynn, Annie Freud, Alan Gillis, Jane Griffiths, Vona Groarke, Jen Hadfield, Sophie Hannah, Tracey Herd, Kevin Higgins, Matthew Hollis, A.B. I hope, as I’m typing this, my copy is winging its way south from the United Kingdom. Identity Parade: New British & Irish Poets, also published by Bloodaxe and edited by Roddy Lumsden, promises to be a feast. The anthology aims to reflect “the multicultural make-up of contemporary Britain” and to showcase the work of talented poets such as Mir Mahfuz Ali, Rowyda Amin, Malika Booker, Roger Robinson, Karen McCarthy, Nick Makoha, Denise Saul, Seni Seniviratne, Shazea Quraishi and Janet Kofi Tsekpo. Their previous collections – The Dog in the Sky (Ivory), The Treekeeper’s Tale (Petit), Day of the Dead (Donovan) and Redgrove’s Wife (Shuttle) – are favourites and occupy the top shelf of my poetry bookcase.Įdited by Bernardine Evaristo and Daljit Nagra, Ten: New Poets from Spread the Word (Bloodaxe) will be available later this year. Helen Ivory’s The Breakfast Machine (Bloodaxe), Pascale Petit’s What the Water Gave Me – Poems after Frida Kahlo (Seren), Katie Donovan’s Rootling (Bloodaxe) and Penelope Shuttle’s Sandgrain and Hourglass (Bloodaxe), have been long awaited. As a poet living in South Africa, I’d like to mention how proud I am of the strong, beautiful books sent into the world by Modjaji. Philippa Yaa de Villiers’s second collection The Everyday Wife, published by the intrepid South African women’s publisher Modjaji Books, follows her popular first collection, Taller than buildings. I greatly enjoyed Naomi Foyle’s bold, imaginative and sensuous collection, The Night Pavilion, and am looking forward to her pamphlet, Grace of the Gamblers – A Chantilly Chantey (Waterloo Press), illustrated by Peter Griffiths. If you’re interested in buying copies online, do make a note of their publication dates or ask your online book store to let you know when they become available.įour of the poets are relatively new to me – Elisabeth Bletsoe ( Pharmacopoeia & Early Selected Works), Mary O’Donnell ( The Ark Builders), Carolyn Jess-Cooke ( Inroads) and Anna Robinson ( The Finders of London) – and I’m looking forward to becoming better acquainted with their work. Some have recently been published, some are not yet available. I thought I’d share a few poetry titles I’m looking forward to reading this year.
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