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Kirjailija

Martyn Crucefix

Kirjat ja teokset yhdessä paikassa: 6 kirjaa, julkaisuja vuosilta 2014-2026, suosituimpien joukossa Quartet. Vertaile teosten hintoja ja tarkista saatavuus suomalaisista kirjakaupoista.

6 kirjaa

Kirjojen julkaisuhaarukka 2014-2026.

Quartet

Quartet

Chris Tutton; Michael Schmit; Moniza Alvi; Mimi Khalvati; Lawrence Sail; Alison Brackenbury; Matt Harvey; Martyn Crucefix; Linda France; Katrina Porteous; Roselle Angwin

Avalanche Books
2018
nidottu
Quartet is an anthology of contemporary poetry inspired by the four seasons.and featuring many of our leading poets.
Our Weird Regiment

Our Weird Regiment

Martyn Crucefix

Shearsman Books
2026
nidottu
In Martyn Crucefix's powerful new poems, the unearthed bones of the dispossessed gather together to march; in rural England, the whinnying of horses heralds an apocalyptic unease; amid October storms, there rises an acute sense of decline and fall as we stand, 'in hope maladroit as the woods riot'. Elsewhere, the ancient pike remains 'the weapon / of choice in the defence of democracy' as Our Weird Regiment evokes a sense of menace and insecurity in the environmental, political and personal spheres.
Between a Drowning Man

Between a Drowning Man

Martyn Crucefix

SALT PUBLISHING
2023
pokkari
Martyn Crucefix’s new collection of poems trace the forensic unfolding of two landscapes – contemporary Britain post-2016 and the countryside of the Marche in central, eastern Italy. Both places are vividly evoked – the coffee shops, traffic tailbacks, shopping malls, tourist-dotted hillsides and valleys of modern Britain appear in stark contrast to the hilltop villages, church spires, deep gorges, natural history and Classical ruins of Italy. Both landscapes come to represent psychic journeys: closer to home there is division everywhere – depicted in both tragic and comic detail – that only a metaphorical death of the self seems able to counteract. Closer to the Mediterranean, the geographical and personal, or romantic, divisions are also shown ultimately to offer possibilities of transcendence. The poems of the longer sequence, ‘Works and Days’, are startlingly free-wheeling, allusive – brilliantly deploying source materials and inspiration from Hesiod’s original and the 10/12th century Indian vacana poems – all bound together by the repeated refrain of bridges breaking down. The Italian poems, as a crown of sonnets, are more formally controlled but the repeating of first and last lines of the individual poems likewise serves to suggest the presence of an overarching unity. In the end, both sequences travel towards death which – while not denying the reality of human mortality, the passage of time – is intended to represent a challenge to the powerful dividing walls between Thee and Me, the liberation of empathetic feeling, even the Daoist erasure of the assumed gulf between self and not-self: ‘these millions of us aspiring to the condition / of ubiquitous dust on the fiery water’.
Spring of the Muses

Spring of the Muses

Chris Tutton; Mimi Khalvati; Moniza Alvi; Lawrence Sail; Martyn Crucefix; Alison Brackenbury; Neil Powell; Debjani Hhatterjee; Ian Seed

Avalanche Books
2019
nidottu
A poetry anthology comprising poems inspired by art, music and dance, featuring Chris Tutton, Mimi Khalvati, Moniza Alvi, Martyn Crucefix, Alison Brackenbury, Neil Powell, Lawrence Sail and many more.
Lovely Disciplines

Lovely Disciplines

Martyn Crucefix

Seren
2017
nidottu
Seren is thrilled to be publishing the new collection by Martyn Crucefix, widely acknowledged as one of the UK’s finest poets. The Lovely Disciplines is full of elegantly crafted, intriguing poems. The ‘disciplines’ of the title turn out to encompass many of the manifestations of human love: of a child, a partner, of aging parents, of the world.
The Time We Turned

The Time We Turned

Martyn Crucefix

Shearsman Books
2014
lehtivihko, moniste
Martyn Crucefix's new poems vividly evoke the landscapes of northern England and - in a sequence of sonnets inspired by the writing of Rosalia de Castro - the north west of Spain. But more than place, they explore the ways in which we inhabit time - how we are harmed and healed by it, how we deny, ignore, sublimate, repeat or reprise it. I'd want to say it was past seven o'clock or perhaps by then even seven-fifteen - I'm sure of it now - a quarter past the hour was the time we turned and part of what it meant ('The map house')