Everything is Present

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A01=Anna Woodford
Author_Anna Woodford
Category=DCF
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eq_poetry

Product details

  • ISBN 9781784633509
  • Dimensions: 129 x 198mm
  • Publication Date: 12 May 2025
  • Publisher: Salt Publishing
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Poems within Everything is Present have won The Ledbury Competition, The Wigtown Prize, and were featured in The Forward Book of Poems of the Year.

‘As brave, as bravura, a performance as the ill-advised, little-known acts it celebrates, this is both a lament and a defiant affirmation of an individual’s life.’ Phillip Gross, Ledbury Prize

‘A stark and timely reminder of how there is always some level of choice when it comes to traditions and symbols, and the significant role this choice has in harming or healing our collective and individual relationships with the past.’ Roseanne Watt, Wigtown Prize

Everything is Present is a mid-life coming of age tale. The back to front narrative is divided into three sections, End, Middle and Beginning. Poems explore the effect of grief and ageing and the ability of these two to alter the past as well as the present. The title comes from a Buddhist meditation referring to the non-linear nature of time as well as its gift.

The first section End contains award-winning elegies for a mother who died on a locked-down ward during the pandemic and a grandfather who escaped from Nazi-occupied Lwów (then in Poland, now the Ukraine). There is also a Ledbury-winning poem describing a Jerry Lee Lewis- loving father’s visit to A&E. The second section Middle negotiates the shifting ground of middle age exploring women’s bodies, work, therapy and the consolations of love and spirituality in poems featuring amusement arcades, train derailments and Allen Jones’ controversial women as furniture sculptures. Beginning revisits youthful sex, running away from home and Happy Shopper before embracing middle aged sex and then returning in a (never) ending to the mother.

Anna Woodford has won the Ledbury Competition, the Wigtown Prize, an Authors Foundation Award, an Eric Gregory Award, a PBS recommendation and two Northern Writers’ awards. Her poetry has been featured on buses in Newcastle and York and in North East metro stations and fire stations. She has completed writing residencies at Hawthornden Castle and the Blue Mountain Center (New York). She is a freelance teacher and writer and lives in Newcastle with her husband and son. www.annawoodford.co.uk

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