Book description
To mark the Diamond Jubilee of Queen Elizabeth II's accession to
the throne, Poet Laureate Carol Ann Duffy brings together a dazzling
array of contemporary poets (sixty in fact) to write about each of the
of the sixty years of Her Majesty's reign. Celebrated writers as Simon
Armitage, Gillian Clarke, Wendy Cope, Geoffrey Hill, Jackie Kay,
Michael Longley, Andrew Motion, Don Paterson and Jo Shapcott,
alongside some of the newest young talent around - address a moment or
event from their chosen year, be it of personal or political
significance or both. Through a series of specially commissioned
poems, Jubilee Lines offers a unique portrayal of the country and
times in which we have lived since 1952, culminating in an essential
portrait of today: the way we speak, the way we chronicle, the way we
love and fight, the way we honour and remember. Brilliantly introduced
and edited by Carol Ann Duffy, Jubilee Lines is an unforgettable
commemoration: not only a monarch's reign but of a way of living for
generations of her peoples.
Carol Ann Duffy was born in Glasgow and grew up in Stafford. She
won the 1993 Whitbread Award for Poetry and the Forward Prize for best
collection for Mean Time. The World's Wife received the E. M. Forster
Award in America, while Rapture won the T. S. Eliot Prize 2005. She is
currently Professor of Contemporary Poetry at Manchester Metropolitan
University. Her most recent volumes are New and Collected Poems for
Children (2009) and The Bees (2011). In 2009 she was appointed Poet Laureate.