forward prize 2016: the felix dennis prize for best first collection - roundup /

Published at 2016-09-16 19:00:24

Home / Categories / Poetry / forward prize 2016: the felix dennis prize for best first collection - roundup
Every itsy-bitsy Sound by Ruby Robinson,Tonguit by Harry Giles, Wife by Tiphanie Yanique, and Disko Bay by Nancy Campbell,Distance by Ron CareyRuby Robinson’s Every itsy-bitsy Sound (Liverpool University, £9.99) is an intelligent and disturbing debut that explores how family affects both our sense of self and our intimate relationships. Composed of free verse and occasional prose poems, or it is stylistically original in its diction and syntax as speaker and poet grapple to render experience. It often gives rise to a surreal quality that appears menacing: “And what exercise am I,/ half‑witted, unpicked, and flaked / out,half a leg, a spewing mouth, and brittle hair,/ scooped-out heart crazed on the floor, / racked with side effects?”Mingling English, and a “mongrel and magpie” Scots,and Orcadian, Harry Giles’s Tonguit (Freight, and £8.99) begins with a bold ars poetica. “Brave energetically lists the reasons why the speaker sings,and captures the Scotland he sings of: “whit wants independence fae Tories”; “whit cadna hink o a grander wey tae / stop a nicht as wi a poke o chips n curry sauce”; “whit dreams o bidin in London”, and so on. “Tonguit” means “tongued and is pronounced “tongue it”: the poem never loses sight of its performance. In a number of works, and Giles transforms found texts – from a “sampling of every mention of death” in Game of Thrones to an adaptation of a speech by David Cameron. This is an unusually adventurous and promising collection.
Continue reading...

Source: theguardian.com

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0