
Afterburn
Blake Morrison(Author)
Chatto & Windus (Publisher)
Published on 29. January 2026
Book
Paperback/Softback
96 pages
978-1-78474-603-2 (ISBN)
Description
'Lucid, tender and humane . . . One of the most formally agile and compassionate poets of our age' Fiona Benson
Here you are, on the balcony,
the sea serenading you,
the sun with its armful of light.
In Afterburn, Blake Morrison returns to poetry, his first calling, to offers scenes from his own life and the lives of others. In psychology, 'afterburn' refers to the time before a past event is assimilated - an idea that resonates through these poems (which themselves linger after reading) about memory and our attempts to articulate, shape or contain it.
Throughout the collection, not least in two extraordinary sequences - one about his sister, the other about Elizabeth Bishop - the poet sees with new eyes the turning points in a life's accidental course. What holds his wise, touching, melancholy yet joyful poems together are the small intimacies that bind us to others, under time's lengthening shadow: 'you moved too fast for me to catch you / and so did the years.'
Playful and charming, sometimes rakishly so, Afterburn nevertheless reveals an open, and vulnerable, heart.
***
'Distils the insights of a seasoned memoirist into images that linger long after the final page' Julia Copus
'A master of the sonnet . . . I'm taking Afterburn to my desert island' Hugo Williams
Here you are, on the balcony,
the sea serenading you,
the sun with its armful of light.
In Afterburn, Blake Morrison returns to poetry, his first calling, to offers scenes from his own life and the lives of others. In psychology, 'afterburn' refers to the time before a past event is assimilated - an idea that resonates through these poems (which themselves linger after reading) about memory and our attempts to articulate, shape or contain it.
Throughout the collection, not least in two extraordinary sequences - one about his sister, the other about Elizabeth Bishop - the poet sees with new eyes the turning points in a life's accidental course. What holds his wise, touching, melancholy yet joyful poems together are the small intimacies that bind us to others, under time's lengthening shadow: 'you moved too fast for me to catch you / and so did the years.'
Playful and charming, sometimes rakishly so, Afterburn nevertheless reveals an open, and vulnerable, heart.
***
'Distils the insights of a seasoned memoirist into images that linger long after the final page' Julia Copus
'A master of the sonnet . . . I'm taking Afterburn to my desert island' Hugo Williams
Reviews / Votes
'Blake Morrison's poems move with unforced grace between grief and illumination, discovering time and again the luminous in the everyday: the light that spills from a canoeist's oars, the "feather-veins and spider-threads" of a wild fennel leaf... Following the gentle cadence of these poems we are led "bare-foot, soft-foot, lightsome as air" through a terrain of sharp-eyed domestic vignettes, a powerful sonnet sequence addressed to the poet's late sister and deft refractions of Elizabeth Bishop's prose. Plain-speaking, intensely humane, and musical, Afterburn distils the insights of a seasoned memoirist into images that linger long after the final page' * Julia Copus * 'It isn't often you pick up a new book of poems without a shadow of literary anxiety hanging over your head. Morrison finds the subtlest feelings in the simplest of material, never the other way round. A master of the sonnet, he is never afraid of starting a poem, then pausing to let the subject matter tell him the rest of it. Every poem seems to be a spontaneous adventure into the unknown-till-now - ours, not his. One about different coloured marital teacups hanging on hooks actually made me cry. I'm taking Afterburn to my desert island' * Hugo Williams * 'In Afterburn Blake Morrison takes the quotidian details of our human existence and alchemizes them into poems that are beautifully accessible, lucid, tender and humane. From devastatingly poignant elegies for his sister to poems of furious dissent and protest, Blake Morrison proves himself one of the most formally agile and compassionate poets of our age' * Fiona Benson * A masterclass of lyric distillation and charged observation, demonstrating that nothing is beneath poetic deliberation... This is a poet clearly still in love with life * Guardian * Heartfelt and poignant. A number of lyrical nature poems catch you by surprise with an unexpected image... Morrison can inject the everyday with grace * Spectator *More details
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Vintage Publishing
Product notice
Paperback (UK-trade)
Dimensions
Height: 215 mm
Width: 136 mm
Thickness: 9 mm
Weight
112 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-78474-603-2 (9781784746032)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
01/2026
Vintage Digital
€14.99
Available for download
Person
Born in Skipton, Yorkshire, Blake Morrison is the author of bestselling memoirs, And When Did You Last See Your Father? (winner of the J.R. Ackerley Prize for Autobiography and the Esquire Award for Non-Fiction) and Things My Mother Never Told Me. His poetry collections include Dark Glasses, which won the Dylan Thomas and Somerset Maugham prizes, Pendle Witches, which was illustrated by Paula Rego, and Shingle Street. He is also a novelist, critic, journalist and librettist. He lives in South London.