New Collected Poems

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A01=Sylvia Townsend Warner
Author_Sylvia Townsend Warner
Category=DCF
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War writings
Women

Product details

  • ISBN 9781857549478
  • Weight: 517g
  • Dimensions: 135 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 27 Mar 2008
  • Publisher: Carcanet Press Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The first Collected Poems of Sylvia Townsend Warner (1893-1978) was published by Carcanet in 1982. Since then, more of her work has come to light, including some of the most moving and personal poems she ever wrote. Claire Harman, the original editor and author of the prize-winning biography of the poet, has substantially revised the earlier edition, including over ninety previously uncollected and unpublished poems, with expanded notes, a chronology and an authoritative new introduction.

When Harman's Life was published, it restored Warner, one critic said, to her real place as 'second only to Virginia Woolf among the women writers of our century'. With this collection, the extent of Warner's achievement as a poet can be appreciated.

SYLVIA TOWNSEND WARNER was born in 1893, the only child of a schoolteacher, and educated at home. A talented and knowledgeable musician, in 1917 she joined the editorial board preparing the ten volumes of Tudor Church Music for publication by Oxford University Press, a post she held until 1927. In 1923 Warner met the novelist T.F. Powys, whose writing influenced her own and whose work she in turn encouraged. Warner’s first poetry collection, The Espalier, was published in 1925, followed by Time Importuned (1928), Opus 7 (1931) and Rainbow (1932). Her first novel, Lolly Willowes, was published in 1926, and Mr Fortune's Maggot a year later. It was at T.F. Powys’s house in 1930 that Warner first met the poet Valentine Ackland, whom she invited to live in a cottage that she owned in the village of Chaldon Herring in Dorset. The two women became lovers, a relationship that lasted until Ackland’s death in 1969. Their joint collection of poems Whether a Dove or Seagull was published in 1933. In 1935 Warner and Ackland joined the Communist Party, becoming active campaigners and visiting Spain on behalf of the Red Cross during the Civil War. Warner’s political engagement continued for the rest of her life, even following her disillusion with Communism. She died on 1 May 1978. Sylvia Townsend Warner has a page on the Poetry Archive website, where you can listen to recordings of her reading from her work, and access other useful resources. Click here. Claire Harman's biography of Robert Louis Stevenson was published in 2005, and she is currently working on a book about Jane Austen's fame.

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