Exploring the paradoxes of contemporary life through the lens of an acclaimed Irish poet
In The Readiness, Alan Gillis - one of the most admired Irish poets of his generation - addresses some of the most pressing concerns of our age: how can we live at the centre of our contemporary paradox, disconnected and hyper-connected as we are? A poet of thresholds and crossings, Gillis finds his answers in the suburbs and edgelands, at the hesitation before the doorstep or the gate.
These poems form a series of bad dreams and clear visions that speak to the chaos and fragility of both self and society: the childhood innocence that persists into the resignation of adulthood; the beauty of nature in an age of environmental ruin; the terrible isolation of contemporary life - and the live-streamed, advert-laden over-wiring that springs from its digital commons. With formal confidence, dry wit and often astonishing lyricism, Gillis explores the meaning at the heart of our human contradictions, marking him as one of the most individual and vital poetic voices now at work.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
Fizzing with vernacular and bounding rhythms, yet also precisely lyrical, the poems in The Readiness frequently run away with themselves, attempting to keep up with, and make some sense of, the often digital babble and information overload of our age. . .The Readiness impresses, but more importantly moves and surprises, given Gillis's ability to combine dry humour with insight, vibrant description with direct address, and contemporary relevance with lasting concerns * Ben Wilkinson *
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Zielgruppe
Interest Age: From 18 years
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ISBN-13
978-1-5290-3767-8 (9781529037678)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
Alan Gillis was born in Belfast. He teaches creative writing and modern and contemporary poetry at the University of Edinburgh, and has published four collections of his own poetry. The first, Somebody, Somewhere won the Strong Award for the best first collection in Ireland; Hawks and Doves was shortlisted for the T.S. Eliot Prize. Gillis also wrote Irish Poetry of the 1930s and co-edited The Oxford Handbook of Modern Irish Poetry with Fran Brearton. He was the editor of Edinburgh Review from 2010 to 2015.