Book description
Over seventeen years and nine collections, John Burnside has built -
in the words of Bernard O'Donoghue - 'a poetic corpus of the first
significance', a poetry of luminous, limpid grace. His territory is
the no-man's-land of threshold and margin, the charmed half-light of
the liminal, a domestic world threaded through with mystery, myth and
longing.
In this Selected Poems we can see themes emerge and develop
within the growing confidence of Burnside's sinuous lyric poise: the
place of the individual in the world, the idea of dwelling, of
home, within that community, and the lure of absence and escape
set against the possibilities of renewal and continuity.
This is consummate, immaculate work born out of a lean and agile
craftsmanship, profound philosophical thought and a haunted, haunting
imagination; the result is a poetry that makes intimate, resonant,
exquisite music.
John Burnside has published seven works of fiction and eleven works
of poetry, including
The Asylum Ward
, which won the 2000 Whitbread Poetry Award. His latest collection,
Black Cat Bone
, won the T S Eliot Award in 2012. His memoir,
A Lie About My Father
, was published in 2006 was the Saltire Scottish Book of the Year and
the Scottish Arts Council Non-Fiction Book of the Year. The second
volume of his memoir,
Waking Up In Toytown
, was published by Jonathan Cape in 2010.
A Summer of Drowning
was shortlisted for the 2011 Costa Novel Award.