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  • av John F. Deane
    247

    A 'Selected and New Poems' from one of Ireland's most important religious poets of recent times.

  • av William Letford
    191

    Letford's long-awaited third book is a tour de force of storytelling and poetry that has the narrative punch of a novel, taking us to the not-too-distant-future, where an artificial intelligence rules the world and a working-class family use their wits to live off the land.

  • av Fred D'aguiar
    191

    Fred D'Aguiar's new collection connects the condition of namelessness of a famous black jockey with a present-day need to give back to those lost souls the dignity of their names.

  • av Eli Payne Mandel
    167

    In poems and translations, The Grid tells a highly unusual set of stories about the end of the world, ancient and modern.

  • av Tristram Fane Saunders
    167

    This first collection by New Poetries poet and Telegraph poetry editor is at once brilliantly witty in language and formal ambition, and wryly dark in its themes.

  • av Isobel Williams
    217

    During the latter phases of covid, Isobel Williams completed the challenge of completing her celebrated translations of Catullus. It joins Carcanet's celebrated Classics series, and like its incomplete predecessor it is illustrated with bondage drawings by the translator herself.

  • av Michael Edwards
    271

    Michael Edwards' new collection consists of 92 poems forming a single long poem that recounts the finding of another world in moments, often dramatic, sometimes everyday, which become doorstones, thresholds.

  • av Ned Denny
    177

    Ventriloquise is a provocative, assured collection of voices and visions from the award-winning author of Unearthly Toys and B (After Dante).

  • av John Birtwhistle
    191

    Partial Shade is the award-winning poet's own selection and arrangement from his life's work.

  • av Paul Stephenson
    167

    With the world turned upside down following the sudden death of a same sex partner, the poet works through the aftermath, negotiating the people and 'stuff' left behind, and transforming difficult lived experience by interrogating language as a means to process grief and loss, ultimately finding love, hope and catharsis.

  • av Joey Connolly
    171

  • av Thomas Kinsella
    177

  • av Rebecca Goss
    167

    Rebecca Goss' fourth and most ambitious collection, Latch, is a study in the act of returning. It is about reconnecting to a place, Suffolk, and understanding what it once held, and what it now holds for a woman and her family. These poems unearth the deep, lasting attachments people have with the East Anglian countryside, gathering voices of labour, love, and loss with compelling particularity. The book is various, unpredictable: memory and magic interweave, secrets tangle with myth. As in her earlier books, Goss again draws on her distinctive ability to plough difficult, emotional terrain. Here is an anatomy of marriage, her parents' and her own, while the natural world becomes an arena for the emotional push and pull that exists between mothers and daughters. The return to a childhood home recalls young siblings retreating into nature as they steer the adult lives that disintegrate around them. Readers will find themselves beckoned to barns, fields, weirs, to experience both refuge and disturbance: we are shown a county's stars, and why a poet needed to return to live under them.

  • av Lisa Kelly
    177

    A Poetry Book Society Summer Recommendation 2023. BBC Poetry Extra's Book of the Month August 2023. This, Lisa Kelly's second collection, responds to the repression of British Sign Language (BSL) as its occasion and inspiration. Kelly develops the subject through extended sequences which attend to mushrooms and fungi, lifeforms that develop in secret, unnoticed, unappreciated, yet whose existence enriches everyday life. What can such hidden others teach us - if we attune all our senses?

  • av Kit Fan
    167

    Kit Fan (winner of the Hong Kong University International Poetry Prize) explores illness, mortality and gay marriage, set against the larger chaos of Hong Kong and our broken planet.

  • av Lesley Harrison
    177

    In her first Carcanet collection, Lesley Harrison looks north to the sea, the heat of the land at her back. In inventive arrangements of sound and page, Harrison meditates on whale hunts, lost children, cities seen and remembered, and the sound of the gamelan in the Gulf of Bothnia.

  • av Monica Youn
    201

  • av William Carlos Williams
    271

    William Carlos Williams' Paterson, widely regarded as a masterpiece of modern American poetry, is reissued as a Carcanet Classic.

  • av Jason Allen-Paisant
    167

    This second collection from the 2022 OCM Bocas Poetry Prize winner re-imagines Shakespeare's Othello for the modern age, intertwining the identities of 'immigrant' and 'Black'.

  • av Tara Bergin
    201

    Winner of the Michael Hartnett Poetry Award 2024. Shortlisted for the Derek Walcott Prize for Poetry 2023. Shortlisted for the Pigott Poetry Prize 2023. Tara Bergin's third collection, Savage Tales continues to explore original territory, bringing the riddle, song and dialogue into a series of formally inventive and blackly comic sequences. Bergin's book asks us to steer our way through a chorus of exchanges and situations, as she charts the fraught course between the making of individual poems and, uneasy bedfellow of this sustained activity, an authority which is always here called into question. Dramatizing the contemporary and the classic with great wit, ingenuity and panache, Savage Tales confirms Bergin as one of the outstanding poets of our time.

  • av Louise Gluck
    171

    Louise Gluck, winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature 2020, takes a new direction in a fable which returns to essential questions of identity and belonging.

  • av Joe Carrick-Varty
    161

    Debut collection from a British-born Irish writer who was a star of Carcanet's New Poetries VIII anthology.

  • av Laura Scott
    157

    The highly anticipated second collection from the winner of the Seamus Heaney First Collection Prize 2020.

  • av James Campbell
    321

    NB by J. C. is a varied and witty selection from the popular NB column which J. C. wrote in the TLS each week between 1997 and 2020.

  • av Donald Davie
    167

  • av A.E. Stallings
    201

    This Selected includes highlights from Stallings' first four books and also new poems never before collected in book form. A Poetry Book Society Winter Special Commendation 2022.

  • av Jeffrey Wainwright
    161

    The ninth Carcanet collection from one of the finest living English poets.

  • av Peter Davidson
    161

    The second Carcanet poetry collection from Peter Davidson is a book of elegies and consolations for dead friends, past times, and spiritual consolations.

  • av Charlotte Eichler
    161

    The debut collection from Yorkshire-based contributor to New Poetries VIII, Charlotte Eichler.

  • av Jane Draycott
    161

    The Kingdom of Jane Draycott's fifth collection has its face turned towards the future, considering how we face the ever-continuing approach of the unknown.

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