Neil Powell's seventh Carcanet collection explores the deep roots of identity: family histories we inherit, memories we carry, the casual decisions and wrong turnings that add up to make us who we are. 'Do you mean to say you've married / an apprentice fitter and come all this way?' an official asks the poet's grandmother who, trusting to luck, emigrates to a new life in South Africa after the First World War. An ironic and grateful presence, Powell observes the lives that he inherits. Perspectives shift with time: an old photograph shows his mother 'more beautiful and happier than I remember her', his father 'looking for once the statesman he should have been'. At the heart of the book is a compelling narrative based on a journal kept by Powell's grandmother of her life in South Africa: a feckless husband, a 483-mile trek with horse and covered wagon, violence and poverty. There's also a shorter, teasingly fictional narrative and a sequence about the life of a grand piano. Other poems deal with childhood, leaving home and first love; a park in Kent and a wood in Suffolk; an old photograph of the Strand and Louis Armstrong's first solo; the London bombers of 2005; and, finally, two old friends recalled in very different elegies. Meditative, wry, melancholy and celebratory, this is Neil Powell is at his most versatile and memorable.
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Product Details
Dimensions: 135 x 216mm
Publication Date: 23 Feb 2012
Publisher: Carcanet Press Ltd
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781847770950
About Neil Powell
Neil Powell was born in London in 1948 and educated at Sevenoaks School and the University of Warwick. He has taught English owned a bookshop and since 1990 been a full-time author and editor. His books include seven collections of poetry - At the Edge (1977) A Season of Calm Weather (1982) True Colours (1990) The Stones on Thorpeness Beach (1994) Selected Poems (1998) A Halfway House (2004) and Proof of Identity (2012) - as well as Carpenters of Light (1979) Roy Fuller: Writer and Society (1995) The Language of Jazz (1997) all published by Carcanet Press and George Crabbe: An English Life (Pimlico 2004) and Amis & Son: Two Literary Generations (Macmillan 2008). His centenary life of Benjamin Britten will be published by Hutchinson in 2013. He lives in Orford Suffolk.
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