Description

Book Synopsis
The recurrent themes of Little Silver are inheritance, loss, and the relationship between real and imagined lives. Moments of crisis – a near-drowning, a fall down a mine-shaft, the death of a friend – prompt reflection on the stories ‘we tell ourselves about our / selves’, and on the sheer strangeness of existing in our bodies and in time. The book’s title sequence responds to the recent demolition of Jane Griffiths’ childhood home, whose absence appears as ‘a little silvering between the trees’. Setting its absence against the memory of ‘Little Silver’, a small enclave of houses in Exeter that she passed on the way home from school (and whose name fascinated her), she considers the gap between the two as the space of the imagination: the origins of her writing. Other poems centre on the theme of childlessness and the relationship between that and other kinds of making; a sequence centred on conversations between an artist and her imaginary children concludes when the daughter asks ‘So if we existed the tree could stand alone?’ The emphasis in these poems is on inventiveness and endeavour, on lifelines and human traces.

Trade Review
Jane Griffiths is a poet attracted to the cross-hatchings of matter and spirit; inner and outer; air and water; foreignness and a sense of home…she has something of the Dutch still-life painter’s eye: the comprehension of solid form as nothing, finally, but the effect of light. Sensuously wrought and even, at times, subtly erotic, her poems simultaneously evoke another level of pure abstraction, with words in place of coils of paint. -- Adam Thorpe * The Guardian, on Another Country *
A major achievement… outstanding… complex and subtle in thought, supple of tone and piercing in its observation. -- Sarah Broom * Times Literary Supplement, on Another Country *
These are marvellously atmospheric poems: they have something of the quality of very careful watercolours. -- Tim Liardet and Vona Groarke * PBS Bulletin, on Silent in Finisterre *

Table of Contents
9 Waking 10 Inscape 11 The Drowning at Porthcurno 13 Off-spring 14 The Amortals 24 Distance Lane 25 Foundling 26 Lifelines 35 Isolation 36 Grace 37 Out of the Picture 38 Negative Space 39 Snow and Privet 40 Moving the House 41 Little Silver 44 Charm 45 Tall Story 46 Homily 47 The Silence 48 From London far 49 Anchorage 50 Passage 51 Fugue 54 Life Sentence 55 Definition of Huer 56 Stet 57 Sometimes I forget you are dead because 58 Gone Fishing 60 Reading Ane Satyre of the Thrie Estatis on the Day of the Dead 61 Smokey Considers Hilton’s Cat 62 Cot Song 64 Ghost Rhyme 65 Abstraction 68 New Year’s Day 69 New Atlantis 70 Tailpiece

Little Silver

    Product form

    £10.44

    Includes FREE delivery

    RRP £10.99 – you save £0.55 (5%)

    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Thu 25 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Jane Griffiths

    4 in stock

      Trusted by thousands of customers. See 2,385+ Customer Reviews

      View other formats and editions of Little Silver by Jane Griffiths

      Publisher: Bloodaxe Books Ltd
      Publication Date: 15/09/2022
      ISBN13: 9781780376127, 978-1780376127
      ISBN10: 178037612X
      Also in:
      Poetry

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The recurrent themes of Little Silver are inheritance, loss, and the relationship between real and imagined lives. Moments of crisis – a near-drowning, a fall down a mine-shaft, the death of a friend – prompt reflection on the stories ‘we tell ourselves about our / selves’, and on the sheer strangeness of existing in our bodies and in time. The book’s title sequence responds to the recent demolition of Jane Griffiths’ childhood home, whose absence appears as ‘a little silvering between the trees’. Setting its absence against the memory of ‘Little Silver’, a small enclave of houses in Exeter that she passed on the way home from school (and whose name fascinated her), she considers the gap between the two as the space of the imagination: the origins of her writing. Other poems centre on the theme of childlessness and the relationship between that and other kinds of making; a sequence centred on conversations between an artist and her imaginary children concludes when the daughter asks ‘So if we existed the tree could stand alone?’ The emphasis in these poems is on inventiveness and endeavour, on lifelines and human traces.

      Trade Review
      Jane Griffiths is a poet attracted to the cross-hatchings of matter and spirit; inner and outer; air and water; foreignness and a sense of home…she has something of the Dutch still-life painter’s eye: the comprehension of solid form as nothing, finally, but the effect of light. Sensuously wrought and even, at times, subtly erotic, her poems simultaneously evoke another level of pure abstraction, with words in place of coils of paint. -- Adam Thorpe * The Guardian, on Another Country *
      A major achievement… outstanding… complex and subtle in thought, supple of tone and piercing in its observation. -- Sarah Broom * Times Literary Supplement, on Another Country *
      These are marvellously atmospheric poems: they have something of the quality of very careful watercolours. -- Tim Liardet and Vona Groarke * PBS Bulletin, on Silent in Finisterre *

      Table of Contents
      9 Waking 10 Inscape 11 The Drowning at Porthcurno 13 Off-spring 14 The Amortals 24 Distance Lane 25 Foundling 26 Lifelines 35 Isolation 36 Grace 37 Out of the Picture 38 Negative Space 39 Snow and Privet 40 Moving the House 41 Little Silver 44 Charm 45 Tall Story 46 Homily 47 The Silence 48 From London far 49 Anchorage 50 Passage 51 Fugue 54 Life Sentence 55 Definition of Huer 56 Stet 57 Sometimes I forget you are dead because 58 Gone Fishing 60 Reading Ane Satyre of the Thrie Estatis on the Day of the Dead 61 Smokey Considers Hilton’s Cat 62 Cot Song 64 Ghost Rhyme 65 Abstraction 68 New Year’s Day 69 New Atlantis 70 Tailpiece

      Recently viewed products

      © 2026 Book Curl

        • American Express
        • Apple Pay
        • Diners Club
        • Discover
        • Google Pay
        • Maestro
        • Mastercard
        • PayPal
        • Shop Pay
        • Union Pay
        • Visa

        Login

        Forgot your password?

        Don't have an account yet?
        Create account