A rich and varied wildlife takes centre stage in Poems from Snowdonia, part of Seren's new regional pamphlet series celebrating Wales. Featured authors are both classic names like Raymond Garlick, Gillian Clarke, Douglas Houston, Paul Henry, Carol Rumens, and newer voices like Katherine Stansfield, Joe Dunthorne, Nicky Arscot and Zillah Bowes.
The glories of the Pembrokeshire national park are celebrated in this artfully designed booklet from Seren, part of their regional pamphlet series. Poems from Pembrokeshire features both classic poems by authors like Waldo Williams and R.S. Thomas as well as vibrant work from living poets like Tony Curtis, Gillian Clarke and Matthew Francis.
Poems from the Welsh Borders, part of Seren's new regional pamphlet series, celebrates the spirit of the place, ranging from 'the spine of the A470' over the dramatic Brecon Beacons towards Hay-on-Wye and other towns and rivers. Featuring well-known names like Owen Sheers and Richard Gwyn, and newer voices like Jonathan Edwards and Rhiannon Hooson.
Humorous, serious and sometimes outrageous, Tpher Mills poetry covers swimming, love, work, dialects, sex, politics, death and everything in between. From the incidental ordinary to the waywardly imaginative Sex on Toast gathers Mills best-known work together with a host of new and uncollected material. From the earliest poems here, written in his teens, to those written in sardonic middle-age.
Her final collection as Poet Laureate, a frank, disarming and deeply moving exploration of loss and remembrance in their many forms. Presented in a beautiful, foiled package, this will be the poetry book of the year.
"An impressive and engaging collection...the poems are assured yetthey also bring out the often conflicted feelings that places can evoke:strangeness, beauty, loss, violence, distance, closeness, intimacy andindifference" - Judith Beveridge Powerfuldebut collection by a young Western Australian poet. ShevaunCooley was born and raised in the south west of Western Australia, but has beendrawn ceaselessly to the landscapes of North Wales, where she lived for a timein her early twenties. The poems are written out of the questions this dividedorientation raises - about what constitutes a home, and how we might find ourway there. Animals have an ability to home that seems both biological andintuitive. Do we have this compass too? In the poems it is the suddenappearance of wild creatures, the shifting waters of sea or lake or river, theway light falls over the scene, which points to what we are driven to hold, butwhich ultimately evades us. Other material, from the poet's own life -including, inevitably, heartbreak - makes its way into the poems as well, sincemany of these emotions arise from a sense of being unhomed or unsettled. Thereis also a fine intelligence at work, calling in mythical resonances, thetestimony of poets and scientists, and the resources of language, to sharpenthe poet's alertness to her surroundings.
The most complete and current edition of Dylan Thomas' collected poetry in a beautiful gift edition celebrating the centenary of his birth The reputation of Dylan Thomas (1914-1953) as one of the greatest poets of the twentieth century has not waned in the fifty years since his death. A Welshman with a passion for the English language, Thomas’s singular poetic voice has been admired and imitated, but never matched. This exciting, newly edited annotated edition offers a more complete and representative collection of Dylan Thomas’s poetic works than any previous edition. Edited by leading Dylan Thomas scholar John Goodby from the University of Swansea, The Poems of Dylan Thomas contains all the poems that appeared in Collected Poems 1934-1952, edited by Dylan Thomas himself, as well as poems from the 1930-1934 notebooks and poems from letters, amatory verses, occasional poems, the verse film script for “Our Country,” and poems that appear in his “radio play for voices,” Under Milk Wood. Showing the broad range of Dylan Thomas’s oeuvre as never before, this new edition places Thomas in the twenty-first century, with an up-to-date introduction by Goodby whose notes and annotations take a pluralistic approach.