A haiku, an ode, a sonnet, a limerick, an elegy ... more poetry,please.
Poetry Books
Carcanet Press Ltd The Face in the Well
Book SynopsisIn her vibrant third collection, Rebecca Watts shines a light on the tender, spontaneous, creative and creaturely aspects of the self, and asks how we might nurture and shield these from the many physical, psychological and social forces predisposed to keep them down.Wearing a variety of costumes, or none at all, the characters in these dramatic poems play hide-and-seek, guarding their vulnerabilities while yearning for greater connection with others and the world. Animals, as totems and spirit guides, swim, run and fly across the pages. Children tiptoe and improvise their way through landscapes designed to curtail and bewilder them. Adults curate their own funerals, befriend spiders, try to love each other, and go to war. Poets and other heroes ? Brontë , Heaney, Plath, Yeats, Mary Poppins ? are confronted, reflected, refracted and left echoing anew.
£10.79
Carcanet Press Ltd The Banquet
£11.69
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC The Treasuries: Poetry Anthologies and the Making
Book SynopsisThe fascinating history of poetry anthologies and their influence on British society and culture over the last four centuries. For centuries, poetry anthologies shaped the way that generations of British readers encountered literature. Eighteenth-century young women were introduced to the permissible bits of Shakespeare and Swift in censored collections. Working-class Victorians enrolled to be taught from The Golden Treasury at adult learning colleges. Pop-loving teenagers in the 1960s got their first taste of the counterculture from the bestselling The Mersey Sound. InThe Treasuries, Clare Bucknell reveals anthologies to be a unique window into social history. This is the story of some of the most widely read books ever published, and the cultural conversations – around politics, gender, class and nationhood – they sparked.Trade ReviewAnthologies are the sleepers of the bookshelf, loaded with the hidden ideals and prejudices of their compilers. Clare Bucknell reads expertly between their lines to reveal a remarkable alternative history of literature. -- Rosemary HillThe delight of this book is its expert toggling of scale. Bucknell dissects large issues - politics, class, taste, education - via small vignettes: Palgrave collecting his poems with scissors, war poems falling like bombs, poetry on prescription. Her panoramic history throws up unexpected parallels - the Exclusion Crisis and the Spanish Civil War, Keats and working men’s eduction, ballads and pop. Treasuries is smart and learned but unpatronising: it sparkles with appreciation for the anthologist and their always-partial act of selection. -- Emma Smith * author of Portable Magic *Impressive in its coverage of social history, teeming with anecdotes, The Treasuries arrives just as Britain is once more rearranging its literary heritage and 'retelling favourite stories about itself at a moment of national crisis'. -- Peter ConradClare Bucknell is a compelling storyteller as well as a deep and cheerful scholar. A riveting read, The Treasuries changes how a reader approaches the designing and sometimes devious anthologists and the books they sell us. -- Michael SchmidtThis book is a wonderful celebration and examination of anthologies as the cornerstone of our literary culture. -- Ian McMillan
£10.44
Olympia Publishers On Northern Shores
a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.
£6.99
Profile Books Ltd Dust If You Must
Book SynopsisA classic poem with a timeless message, presented in a small and beautiful gift book. Rose Milligan never intended to publicly share her poem 'Dust If You Must', but a series of events led her to publish it in The Lady magazine in 1998. Her charming message about what we value in life resonated with audiences, and it has since been read on BBC radio, posted on Instagram, printed on tea towels, read at funerals and put to music. Now appearing as a book for the first time, beautifully illustrated throughout by illustrator Hayley Wells, Dust If You Must is a timeless reminder to focus on the things we can enjoy in the world, rather than the things we think we need to do.Trade ReviewDust if you must/But wouldn't it be better/To paint a picture, write a letter/Bake a cake or plant a seed ?/Ponder the difference between 'want' and 'need' -- Excerpt from Dust If You Must by Rose Milligan
£7.59
Atebol Cyfyngedig Siwan a Cherddi Eraill
£12.00
Penguin Books Ltd Poukahangatus
Book Synopsis'Moving and hopeful ... will stay with me for a long time' Daisy Buchanan'A fearless, young new voice' Carol Ann Duffy'One of the most exciting debuts I've read in ages' Kaveh Akbar'One of the most startling and original poets of her generation' Joy HarjoThe voice of Tayi Tibble is one of most exciting in poetry today. In Poukahangatus (pronounced 'Pocahontas'), her debut volume, Tibble challenges a dazzling array of mythologies - Greek, Maori, feminist, kiwi - peeling them apart and respinning them in modern terms. Her poems move from rhythmic discussions of the Kardashians, sugar daddies and Twilight to exquisite renderings of precise emotions and the natural world alike. Tibble is also a master narrator of teenage womanhood, its exhilarating highs and devastating lows; her high-camp aesthetics chart the overflowing beauty, irony and ruination of her surroundings.Poem by poem, Tibble carves out a bold new way of engaging history without merely telling it, of straddling modernity and ancestry, desire and exploitation. These are warm, provocative and profoundly original poems, written from a world in which the effects of colonization, land, work and gender are intimately and insidiously connected. Along the way, Tibble scrutinizes perception and asks how she as a Maori woman fits into trends, stereotypes and popular culture. With language that is at once colourful, passionate and laugh-out-loud funny, Poukahangatus announces the presence of a surpassingly daring new poet.Trade ReviewA fearless, young new voice with a huge range, from history to pop culture, with that sense of joy in its own word-music which immediately heralds the start of a poetic and political journey. Along with Hera Lindsay Bird, Tayi Tibble adds excitement to the new poetry coming from New Zealand -- Carol Ann DuffyStartlingly evocative, lush, moving and hopeful - this is a powerful and thrilling new voice that will stay with me for a long time -- Daisy BuchananHurls us into a lush biome of sensual density ... one feels in the presence of a singular, searching mind rigorously excavating its own psychospiritual station. Poukahangatus is one of the most exciting debuts I've read in ages -- Kaveh AkbarTayi Tibble is one of the most startling and original poets of her generation. Her poetry makes doorways of insight into turbulent history. At the end, there we are, all standing together, listening -- Joy HarjoTayi Tibble's Poukahangatus was an incredibly rhythmic and refreshing read! Ripe with dazzling imagery, culture and history, this collection offers readers a tale of identity, cross-generational references and so much more. Tibble's rich language breathes new life into poetry and tethers readers to the history of the Maori people and the lasting impact of colonization. The writing screams, 'I was here before & I'll be back again!' I'd suggest this book to every twenty-something trying to find their way! -- Roya MarshI love your collection [Rangikura], it's so good, I'm so impressed ... You totally encapsulate the heady vibe of being a young woman in New Zealand -- Lorde * Metro NZ *Tibble's luscious, widely praised debut poetry collection [channels] her Maori heritage and the zeitgeist of her childhood ... Tibble transforms tales of mundanity into spellbinding, melodiousencounters. Boys embroiled in a rugby scrum become gritty and vicious ... A game of Cowboys and Indians is incidentally wounding but also depicted as a sharp indictment of the White Savior Complex ... Tibble's running prose poems bubble over with lush imagery and serve as canny time capsules ... Like the stylistic lovechild of Rupi Kaur and Teresia Teaiwa, Tibble is a poet of effervescent verve and great promise -- Diego Báez * Booklist *This chatty, winsome debut by a young New Zealand poet mines family history, Maori myth and the residue of pop culture to fashion a striking sensibility * New York Times Book Review *Tibble's affinity for poetry was literally written in the stars ... Tibble blends past and present, peppering her poems with pop culture references -- Serena Smith * Dazed *
£10.44
Penguin Books Ltd Writing from Ukraine: Fiction, Poetry and Essays
Book Synopsis A selection of fifteen of Ukraine's most important, dynamic and entertaining contemporary writersUnder USSR rule, the subject matter and style of literary expression in Ukraine was strictly controlled and censored. But once Ukraine gained independence in 1991 its literary scene flourished, as the moving and delightful poems, essays and extracts collected here show. There are fifteen authors included in this book, both established and emerging, and in this anthology we see them grappling with history and the future, with big questions and small moments. From essays about Chernobyl to poetry about Robbie Williams, from fiction discussing Jimmy Hendrix live in Lviv to underground Ukrainian poetry of the Soviet era, WRITING FROM UKRAINE offers a unique window into a rich culture, a chance to experience a particularly Ukrainian sensibility and to celebrate Ukraine's nationhood, as told by its writers.Trade ReviewTimely ... an excellent anthology of the work of Ukrainian writers from the past fifty years ... as this collection eloquently shows, Ukraine's writers have forged their own unique cultural identity ... these writers tell the story of modern Ukraine through entrancing meditations on Ukrainian daily life ... powerful -- PD Smith * Guardian *Some of the liveliest and most moving literature in the world is also some of the least known in English. So blessings on editor and translator Mark Andryczyk and the team of expert and eloquent translators he has assembled for bringing us this abundant new anthology of poetry and fiction from Ukraine of the Soviet and post-Soviet periods. It's a great public service to enlarge our acquaintance with this indispensable work, an act of moral generosity. But what the reader will be most grateful for is the sheer pleasure of it. -- Lloyd Schwartz, Poet and Pulitzer Prize-winning criticA rich and dramatic anthology that covers predominantly the post-independence period of Ukrainian literature, bringing together writers from a host of generations and genres. From authors whose work has become synonymous with Ukraine's modern-day cultural revival, such as Yuri Andrukhovych, Victor Neborak, and Yuri Vynnychuk, to an array of new voices representing the emerging literary vanguard, this masterfully translated, lucid, and engaging selection showcases the extraordinary power, vitality, and diversity of writing in contemporary Ukraine. -- Maryna RomanetsWhen it comes to writing, freedom is often assumed to mean the freedom to write on political themes without fear of state reprisal. In the formerly Communist countries of Europe, however, the freedom not to write on political themes can be just as meaningful. These fifteen authors bring us stirring reflections on nature, hilarious morning-after surprises, touching spiritual insights, rich family histories, computers and snowy mountains and gay bars and slag heaps. -- Alex Zucker
£10.44
Seagull Books London Ltd Barricade
Book SynopsisA political play staging the Nazi takeover of Germany with an eye on India. Although Utpal Dutt is acknowledged as a trailblazer of post-Independence Indian theater, English readers have not had access to the range and wealth of his drama. Barricade is a political play that stages the Nazi takeover of Germany in 1933 with an eye on India. Today, the surge to power of far-right parties and fundamentalist fanaticism across the world means that the co-option of democracy and civil society that led to Nazi fascism can happen again—or indeed has already happened—granting Barricade its immediate urgency. Equipped with an introduction analyzing its historical context, this translation of Barricade is also a very rare product in dramatic literature, collating both the printed original as well as a documented performance of the production directed by Dutt.Trade Review"The power of the play lies in its ability to tell us what we, as readers, already know...and that at every point in time, resistance remains the role of the intelligentsia, the media, and citizens. Lal's translation highlights the fact that, regardless of Dutt's own political view, his play remains relevant even fifty years on, and its prescience about the current political scenario makes its translation imperative." * Asymptote *Table of ContentsIntroductionBarricade
£12.99
Seagull Books London Ltd Delicates
Book SynopsisPoems from a critically acclaimed Cuban writer available in English for the first time. Imbued with a sensuality reminiscent of the work of Anaïs Nin, Wendy Guerra’s Delicates takes readers on an exhilarating journey through the cities of love, where women leave their bodies “in the showers of men,” marking their territory “like animals in heat,” their panties “saturated with sand and a sidereal isolating odor.” Guerra’s shocking metaphors and images invite us to enter her gallery of striking and provoking poems where we witness a flight through the air from a thirty-fourth-story window and a woman’s pilgrimage to the salt flats “to taste the pink in stones” on her lover’s behalf. Guerra’s relationship with her native Cuba—much like her relationships with men—is complex and multilayered. Her work confronts the realities of a political system that doesn’t celebrate artistic freedom. Here we have a new way of looking at a woman, an artist, a country, and the colonizers of that country. In these music-infused poems, Guerra shares with us her hard-won truths. Trade Review“Guerra is a Cuban poet who takes the island’s colonial history as a subject and expands it into other contexts like the dynamics of erotic relationships.” * New York Times *“Guerra boldly rifts and morphs her imagery on her way to dramatic endings in poems ranging from the volcanic sex of 'From Pompeii' to other intimate and political exiles. The result is a restless and provocative interrogation of power.” * LitHub *"What a gift this volume is—the first of Guerra’s collections to appear in English—a labor of love from Carlson and Snyder 13 years in the making. Sensuous and passionate, the poems in Delicates sing the praises of bodily pleasure and push against the constraints imposed on the human spirit, whether by autocratic governments or puritanical social mores." * Washington Independent Review of Books *"Cuban poet and novelist Guerra’s work has not often been translated into English, so this volume is a welcome gift to Anglophone readers. . . The range of emotions and tones in Delicates speak to the comprehensiveness of Guerra’s poetic approach: a compelling book of longing and loss." * The Millions *Table of Contents1.Peninsular Psalm2.Red3.Snow in Havana4.Winter Sports5.Salt6.Traveling in Reverse7.A Face in the Crowd8.Memory and Dust9.News from the Queen10.Closed Season on Manatees11.Inuit Promise12.Vertigo over the Niagara13.Delicates14.Breaking Crystal Dragonflies15.Kaos Is Written with K16.The Actress17.Naughty Girl18.Ideas for Silhouettes19.Last Apocrypha of Ana Mendieta20.Possible Similes21.Metro Map22.Promenade through the Private Museum23.Orgy of The Wind24.Jazz Trio25.The Prince and the Pauper26.The Year It Snows27.Airport28.From Pompeii29.Far Away Like Cuba30.Curatorship31.Vertical Psalm32.On Your Knees33.Excess Baggage 34.Consulted Archives35.Without Salvation36.A Cabala of Castoffs 37.Touché 38.Razor to the Wind39.Living on The Airwaves40.On How the Russians Started Saying Goodbye41.Déclassée42.Sea of Tears43.Bunk Beds44.The Worst Thing about Incest
£13.99
Seagull Books London Ltd Strangers in Light Coats: Selected Poems,
Book SynopsisA highly anticipated edition of Zaqtan’s work from 2014 to 2020, all in English for the first time. Ghassan Zaqtan is not only one of the most significant Palestinian poets at work today, but one of the most important poets writing in Arabic. Since the publication of his first collection in 1980, Zaqtan’s presence as a poet has evolved with the same branching and cumulative complexity as his poems—an invisible system of roots insistently pushing through the impacted soil of political and national narratives.Strangers in Light Coats is the third collection of Zaqtan’s poetry to appear in English. It brings together poems written between 2014 and 2020 drawn from six volumes of poetry. Catching and holding the smallest particles of observation and experience in their gravity, the poems sprout and grow as though compelled, a trance of process in which fable, myth, and elegy take form only to fall apart and reconfigure, each line picked apart by the next and brought into the new body. Table of ContentsI Do Not Know the Way to AleppoThe Road to the LakesSpeak Stranger, SpeakWhen We Lost the WarGoing To Listen to My Father’s MiraclesDo Not Call to Me with Your Wide Eyes
£16.14
Grosvenor House Publishing Ltd A la Carte
Book SynopsisThis is a book of poetry about mental health, love and lost love.
£9.36
Flame Tree Publishing Sonnets & Poems of William Shakespeare
Book Synopsis Shakespeare's sonnets are amongst the most admired, complex and beautiful poems ever written. This gorgeous new collection includes sonnets from Romeo and Juliet, Henry V and Love's Labour's Lost, to create a comprehensive collection from the greatest writer of the English poetic form. Little treasures, the FLAME TREE COLLECTABLE CLASSICS are chosen to create a delightful and timeless home library. Each stunning, gift edition features deluxe cover treatments, ribbon markers, luxury endpapers and gilded edges. The original text is accompanied by a Glossary of Victorian and Literary terms produced for the modern reader.
£8.54
Wild Goose Publications Julian of Norwich’s Teabag: Poems and prayers
Book SynopsisMytripisthisteabag,givingupitsloveThisperforatedplanet,inmysteamingmug'Everydayisapoem. From the first cup of tea in the morning as the recycling lorry trundles down the street to those final random thoughts before we drop off at night. As the children grow up and someone we love dies; as we rage against life and love brings us home. DearLife,DearAll,DearMe,DearYouAprayer,asign,someshysynchronicitySomedaysallweaskforissomekindofclue'Martin Wroe lives with Meg, a painter, in North London where their devotion to each new day begins with tea. At one time on staff at The Independent and later The Observer and a former chair of the Greenbelt Arts Festival, Martin is an associate member of the Iona Community and a regular contributor to BBC Radio 4's Thought for the Day.
£10.44
Olympia Publishers A Collection of Poetry - Projectiles into Space
Book Synopsis
£5.99
Olympia Publishers Ame Soeur
Book Synopsis
£5.99
Olympia Publishers The Things I have Never Told You Part 2
Book Synopsis
£7.59
Renard Press Ltd Contraflow: An Anthology: Lines of Englishness
Book SynopsisPoets have grappled with the vexed question of what constitutes Englishness since time immemorial, and the poetry of the past century has seen perhaps some of the biggest evolutions in national identity. Contraflow takes a completely new approach to the subject of Englishness, and in this stimulating and entertaining anthology two poetic currents flow against each other, so that different decades merge, well-known stanzas brushing shoulders with more neglected verse. What emerges is an extraordinary mosaic of poetic responses to English history, culture and landscape - satirical, visionary, lyrical, comic, political, meditative - yet one which offers a recognisable picture of a land both united and divided through a hundred years. A Guardian and Sunday Times poetry book of the year.Table of ContentsForeword by Ian McMillan; 'A Conversation about Englishness' by John Greening and Kevin Gardner; Angles of Entry: 2020s: 'Foxglove Country' by Zaffar Kunial; 2010s: 'England, I loved you' by David Clarke; 2000s: 'The only thing far away' by Kei Miller; 1990s: 'Somerset' by Elizabeth Jennings; 1980s: 'England' by Elaine Feinstein; 1970s: 'Earthed' by U.A. Fanthorpe; 1960s: 'England' by Anne Stevenson; 1950s: 'Shipton-under-Wychwood' by Muriel Spark; 1940s: 'An Archaeological Picnic' by John Betjeman; 1930s: 'You that love England' by C. Day Lewis; Country: 1920s: 'Forefathers' by Edmund Blunden; 2020s: 'Daffodils push through in the mild first days of January' by Rebecca Watts, 'The Knowledge' by John Challis, 'The Only English Kid' by Hannah Lowe, 'Greensleeves' by Grace Nichols, 'Self-Portrait as Katharine of Aragon' by Penelope Shuttle, 'Chevening (X)' by Robert Selby, 'The Kingdom' by Jane Draycott, from 'Between the Islands' by Philip Gross, 'South and West' by Matthew Francis, 'For Cousin John' by Raymond Antrobus, 'United Kingdom' by Tom Sastry, 'The Morning After' by David Constantine; Divide: 1930s: 'Birmingham' by Louis MacNeice; 2010s: 'Another Country' by Sean O'Brien, 'Driving through the Pit Town' by Rory Waterman, 'Homing' by Liz Berry, 'Bridge' by Stuart Henson, 'Migration' by Mimi Khalvati, 'Cricket' by Michael Hofmann, 'Walk with Me' by Roger Robinson, 'Etcetera' by Steve Ely, 'Kerrie' by Elisabeth Sennitt Clough, 'The Walled Garden' by Sarah Howe, 'Stamping Grounds (Earlier)' by Zaffar Kunial, 'White Cliffs' by Carol Ann Duffy ; Keep Calm: 1940s: 'Still Falls the Rain' by Edith Sitwell; 2000s: 'All Possibilities' by Andrew Motion, 'The Thames Never Breathes' by Katrina Naomi, 'A Map of Rochdale' by John Siddique, 'Dead End' by Glyn Hughes, 'Hung' by Imtiaz Dharker, 'Going Places' by Glen Cavaliero, 'The Road' by Jane Draycott, 'English Zen' by William Scammell, 'Bollockshire' by Christopher Reid, 'Bam Chi Chi La La: London, 1969' by Lorna Goodison, 'Parade's End' by Daljit Nagra, 'Scene at a Conference' by George Szirtes ; All Change: 1950s: 'Middlesex' by John Betjeman; 1990s: 'A Major Road for Romney Marsh' by U.A. Fanthorpe, 'A View from Stansted' by Brian Jones, 'Home' by Fred D'Aguiar, 'Satellite' by John Greening, 'Tudor Garden, Southampton' by Ruth Padel, 'About Benwell' by Gillian Allnutt, 'Presents from My Aunts in Pakistan' by Moniza Alvi, 'Video Tale of a Patriot' by Glyn Maxwell, 'Cambridge' by Kate Clanchy, 'English Weather' by Wendy Cope, 'Broadmead Brook' by C.H. Sisson; And Be Merry: 1960s: 'The Whitsun Weddings' by Philip Larkin; 1980s: 'The 4.15' by Fiona Pitt-Kethley, 'Lonely Hearts' by Wendy Cope, 'England at Christmas, 1982' by Gavin Ewart, 'Sister of the Planets' by Edward Lowbury, 'Costa Brava' by John Gohorry, 'Apple Gatherers' by Philip Gross, 'Midsummer (XXXVI)' by Derek Walcott, 'Summer in the Country' by Alison Brackenbury, 'Summer Pudding' by Grevel Lindop, 'As the West End Allegro Subsides Today' by Jack Mapanje, 'Wailing in Wandsworth' by Kit Wright, 'A Prayer to Live with Real People' by Anne Stevenson; Recessional: 1970s: 'Three Knights' by Joseph Brodsky, 'The Vanished Places' by Neil Powell, 'Mercian Hymns (I)' by Geoffrey Hill, 'Time Removed' by James Berry, 'Ploughland' by Peter Scupham, 'The Branch Line' by Patricia Beer, 'Strike' by Jon Silkin, 'Gladstone Street' by Charles Tomlinson, 'Reformation' by Anthony Thwaite, 'Returning from Church' by Kathleen Raine, 'At the Castle Hotel, Taunton' by Peter Porter, 'By Rail through the Earthly Paradise, Perhaps Bedfordshire' by Denise Levertov, 'Leavings' by Seamus Heaney, 'Sad Grave of an Imperial Mongoose' by Geoffrey Grigson, 'The Shoot' by Elizabeth Jennings, 'Last Load' by Ted Hughes; Rebellion: 1980s: 'Rules for Beginners' by Carol Rumens; 1960s: 'Diary of a Rebel' by Rosemary Tonks, 'Adolescence' by Thom Gunn, 'Mrs Albion You've Got a Lovely Daughter' by Adrian Henri, 'Telephone Conversation' by Wole Soyinka, 'A Poem about Poems about Vietnam' by Jon Stallworthy, 'Demo Against the Vietnam War, 1968' by Dannie Abse, 'Nadir' by Molly Holden, 'Elm' by Sylvia Plath, 'What the Chairman Told Tom' by Basil Bunting, 'Homage to a Government' by Philip Larkin; Securities: 1990s: 'Phrase Book' by Jo Shapcott; 1950s: 'Afternoon Tea' by Dom Moraes, 'Eunice' by John Betjeman, 'Wind' by Ted Hughes, 'Watercolour of Grantchester Meadows' by Sylvia Plath, 'The Pot Geranium' by Norman Nicholson, 'The Balloon at Selborne' by Margaret Stanley-Wrench, 'Patriotic Poem' by John Wain, 'A Ballad for Katharine of Aragon' by Charles Causley, 'I Remember' by Stevie Smith, 'Leaving England' by Ingeborg Bachmann; Visionary: 2000s: 'A Vision' by Simon Armitage; 1940s: from 'Little Gidding' by T.S. Eliot, 'A Room at Nightfall' by E.J. Scovell, 'Daybreak' by Lilian Bowes Lyon, 'Son of Mist' by James Reeves, 'Wensleydale' by Patric Dickinson, 'The Island City' by Sidney Keyes, 'In the Backs' by Frances Cornford, 'Voices' by Frances Bellerby, 'The Country House' by Frederic Prokosch, 'Journey to London' by J.C. Hall, 'The Burning of the Leaves' by Laurence Binyon ; Power: 2010s: 'Diagnosis: 'Londonism'' by Rishi Dastidar; 1930s: 'The Pylons' by Stephen Spender, 'A Summer Night' by W.H. Auden, 'After the Jubilee, 1935' by John Squire, 'Children of wealth' by Elizabeth Daryush, from 'Autumn Journal' by Louis MacNeice, 'Searchlights and Bombers' by Geoffrey Grigson, 'Instructions from England, 1936' by Valentine Ackland, 'Now as Then' by Anne Ridler, 'The Silent Sunday' by William Plomer, 'The Eight Men' by Richard Church ; Endgame: 2020s: 'Lord of Misrule' by Gregory Leadbetter; 1920s: from 'The Waste Land' by T.S. Eliot, 'Innocent England' by D.H. Lawrence, 'In the National Gallery' by Siegfried Sassoon, 'The Trees are Down' by Charlotte Mew, from 'The Land (Winter)' by Vita Sackville-West, 'A Wish' by Ivor Gurney, 'Tell me not here...' by A.E. Housman, 'Voices from Things Growing in a Churchyard' by Thomas Hardy, 'The Sad Shepherd' by Sylvia Townsend Warner, 'As the team's head brass' by Edward Thomas; Exit Here: 'England, Where Did You Go?' by Holly Hopkins, 'England' by Dennis O'Driscoll, 'Being English' by Peter Daniels; Indexes and Notes: A Note on the Text; Notes on the Poets and Poems; Index of Titles; Index of Poets; Index of First Lines; Acknowledgements; Credits and Permissions
£14.24
Renard Press Ltd All that Glitters
Book SynopsisJessie's life is sorted. More than. So when her friends hear that Queer Eye is finally coming to London, they lie about her perfect life in order to get her a spot on her favourite TV show. However, as she starts to dismantle what she thought she loved, it unravels in a way she never imagined?All that Glittersis a sparkling new comedy and exploration of queer love.
£9.71
Renard Press Ltd True to One Another
Book SynopsisJohn Greening's personal selection aims to restore Arnold's name as one of the finest poets of the Victorian era. Readers may be surprised to learn just how ahead of his time Arnold was in his tastes and values, as well as in his early use of free verse.
£8.99
Graffeg Limited Otter Accordion Book No 2
£12.34
Olympia Publishers Burning Hearts
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£5.99
Olympia Publishers Our Stories
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£9.17
Olympia Publishers Perfect Timing
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£6.99
Olympia Publishers Poems Of 2023
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£8.54
Olympia Publishers Poetry and Jaunts from the Broken Soul
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£14.39
Olympia Publishers Phoenix
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£10.44
Olympia Publishers Stay Calm and Cheerful
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£5.99
Olympia Publishers The Poetry of Bella Ayub
£5.99
Olympia Publishers Poetry to Enjoy
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£6.99
Olympia Publishers The Pink Shoes
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£7.59
Olympia Publishers To Whom it May Concern Hardback
£999.99
Olympia Publishers Thrive Hardback
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£14.39
Olympia Publishers Love Sex and Death
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£5.99
Olympia Publishers Poems of a Sort
£6.99
Olympia Publishers Where Madness Shadows Fall
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£6.99
Olympia Publishers Found.
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£6.99
Troubador Publishing Ltd A Lockdown Diary
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£9.49
Pegasus Elliot Mackenzie Publishers Pathetic Fallacy
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£6.99
Pegasus Elliot Mackenzie Publishers Songs From A Broken Heart
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£5.99
Pegasus Elliot Mackenzie Publishers Pie recipes
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£5.99
Pegasus Elliot Mackenzie Publishers The Epic Poems
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£7.59
Pegasus Elliot Mackenzie Publishers Battlefields
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£5.99
Pegasus Elliot Mackenzie Publishers The Death and Rebirth of Affection
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£7.59
Pegasus Elliot Mackenzie Publishers Oceans of Hope
£9.49
Pegasus Elliot Mackenzie Publishers Poetry Collection
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£7.59
Pegasus Elliot Mackenzie Publishers Light Shines from the Shadows
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£7.59
Pegasus Elliot Mackenzie Publishers Religious Ten Songs and Thirty Sonnets
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£8.50