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E-raamat: Ten: the new wave

  • Formaat: 160 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Oct-2014
  • Kirjastus: Bloodaxe Books Ltd
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781780372129
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  • Formaat: 160 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Oct-2014
  • Kirjastus: Bloodaxe Books Ltd
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781780372129
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Ten: the new wave presents poetry from some of the most exciting new poets in Britain today. These ten poets were selected for The Complete Works 2 mentoring project, a groundbreaking initiative to promote diversity and quality in British poetry, initiated by the writer Bernardine Evaristo. The poets follow on from the first group to take part in this scheme, whose work was published in Bernardine Evaristo and Daljit Nagra's anthology Ten: new poets from Spread the Word (2010). Most of those poets have gone on to win awards and have their poetry collections published. The new poets in this anthology are Mona Arshi, Jay Bernard, Kayo Chingonyi, Rishi Dastidar, Edward Doegar, Inua Ellams, Sarah Howe, Adam Lowe, Eileen Pun and Warsan Shire. These poets have backgrounds in Asia, Europe, the Caribbean and Africa, and their work draws on their multicultural heritage and tapestry. Many of them also work across art forms and have enjoyed success as playwrights, graphic artists and even in the martial arts. Talented, adventurous and culturally rich, these poets will open up new landscapes for the reader.

Arvustused

These ten exciting poets record with confidence and vigour a tune rarely heard on these shores and this collection of their work is a boost to the body of contemporary British poetry. -- Carol Ann Duffy What fantastic poets they are: all those cultures, all that craft. -- Bernardine Evaristo

Nathalie Teitler: Preface 11(4)
Karen McCarthy Woolf: A True Fellowship 15(8)
1 Wars An Shire
Comment: Pascale Petit
23(2)
Backwards
25(2)
Men in Cars
27(2)
Sara
29(2)
Midnight in the Foreign Food Aisle
31(1)
Haram
32(1)
The Ugly Daughter
33(2)
The House
35(5)
2 Eileen Pun
Comment: Sasha Dugdale
40(3)
Truffle Hunter
43(2)
For Carlo, My Neighbour
45(1)
Goodly Gongsun
46(2)
Some Common Whitethroat Chit-Chat
48(2)
Lesser Whitethroat
50(3)
Studio Apartment: Sunday
53(3)
3 Adam Lowe
Comment: Patience Agbabi
56(2)
The Kiss
58(1)
Tryst with the Devil
59(1)
Afterlife @ Aftershock
60(1)
Vada That
61(2)
Buzzing Affy
63(2)
Tough Look
65(3)
4 Sarah Howe
Comment: W.N. Herbert
68(1)
From A Certain Chinese Encyclopedia
69(1)
Tame
69(3)
Frenzied
72(1)
Innumerable
73(1)
Others
74(2)
Having just broken the water pitcher
76(2)
That from a long way off look like flies
78(3)
5 Inua Ellams
Comment: W.N. Herbert
81(1)
Of all the boys of Plateau Private School
82(2)
Short Shorted / Odogbolu 1995
84(2)
Ghetto van Gogh
86(1)
Swallow Twice
87(2)
Swallow twice, and live
89(1)
The National Anthem
90(1)
The / Forced
91(4)
6 Edward Doegar
Comment: Sean O'brien
95(1)
Half-Ghazal
96(2)
Consent
98(1)
The Waiting Room
99(3)
Something Understood
102(1)
April
103(1)
That Elegiac Tone
104(3)
7 Rishi Dastidar
Comment: Daljit Nagra
107(1)
Licking Stamps
108(1)
22 March, Working in an Office on Berners Street
109(1)
The British genius
110(1)
Making a cheese souffle rise
111(1)
Towards a singularity
112(1)
Gunmetal
113(3)
8 Kayo Chingonyi
Comment: Anthony Joseph
116(2)
How to Cry
118(1)
The Room
119(1)
calling a spade a spade
120(1)
The N Word
120(1)
Alterity
121(1)
The Cricket Test
122(1)
On Reading 'Colloquy in Black Rock'
122(1)
Varsity Blues
123(1)
Casting
123(1)
Callbacks
124(1)
Normative Ethics
124(3)
9 Jay Bernard
Comment: Kei Miller
127(2)
Fake Beach
129(1)
Song of the Strike
130(3)
Punishment
133(1)
Yes, they hate each other
134(1)
The Basics
135(4)
10 Mona Arshi
Comment: Mimi Khalvati
139(2)
Ghazal
141(1)
The Daughters
142(1)
The Bird
143(1)
Phone Call on a Train Journey
144(1)
In the Coroner's Office
145(2)
Notes Towards an Elegy
147(4)
Editor's biography 151(1)
Mentor biographies 152(6)
Acknowledgements 158(1)
Previous publications 159
Karen McCarthy Woolf writes poetry, drama and short fiction for print, online, broadcast and live platforms. In 2005 her play Dido, based on the life of a mixed-race girl who grew up in Kenwood House, Hampstead in the 1760s, was broadcast on BBC Radio 4. She was also writer in residence at the Museum of Garden History and literature development agency Spread the Word. Her poetry chapbook The Worshipful Company of Pomegranate Slicers was selected as a New Statesman Book of the Year in 2006. her first full-length collection, An Aviary of Small Birds, is published by Carcanet in 2014. She has taught creative writing for agencies The Photographers' Gallery, City Lit, Southbank Centre, English PEN, the Arvon Foundation and others. In 2010 a selection of her recent poetry was published in Ten: new poets from Spread the Word (Bloodaxe, ed. Bernardine Evaristo and Daljit Nagra), an anthology showcasing the work of ten new poets selected for the The Complete Works development programme, and in 2014 her anthology Ten: the next wave is published by Bloodaxe with the Complete Works. She has also edited two other anthologies, Bittersweet: Black Women's Contemporary Poetry (The Women's Press, 1998) and Kin (Serpent's Tail, 2004). She is an associate editor of Wasafiri, on the editorial board of Magma, and reviews for Modern Poetry in Translation.