
Sundowner
Phoebe Hesketh(Author)
Enitharmon Press
Published on 1. September 1997
Book
Hardback
55 pages
978-1-870612-08-1 (ISBN)
Description
When Phoebe Hesketh's Collected Poems "Netting the Sun" were published by Enitharmon in 1989, reviewers were quick to praise her considerable achievements in a writing career of over forty years: "Outposts" described the book as 'a solid and significant collection of poems that deserves to reach a wider audience', and "P.N. Review" called it 'an immensely rewarding book distinguished by a lucid intelligence and a quiet integrity'. In "Sundowner", a newly-written selection, Phoebe Hesketh shows again her skill and vitality in poems that explore familiar themes with freshness, humour and a remarkable stoicism.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Dimensions
Height: 216 mm
Width: 138 mm
Weight
999 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-870612-08-1 (9781870612081)
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Schweitzer Classification
Person
Phoebe Hesketh, daughter of the pioneer radiologist A.E.Rayner, was born in Preston in 1909 and edcuated at Cheltenham Ladies' College. For most of her life she has lived in Lancashire, in a landscape frequently described in her poetry, and also in her prose books Rivington (1972) and Village of the Mountain Ash (1990). During the Second World War she worked for the Bolton Evening News and was later a freelance lecturer, poetry teacher and journalist, producing many articles for journals and scripts for the BBC. She began writing poetry at an early age, but not until 1948 was her first book published; it was followed by nine further volumes before her Collected Poems were gathered together in 1989. Her poetry for younger readers has been published in A Song of Sunlight (Chatto, 1974) and in Six of the Best (Puffin, 1989). She has published fifteen poetry collections, and became a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 1956.