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RESULTSSearching enCompass books for 'Leontia Flynn'... We found 2 matches.
Leontia Flynn
Drives Following on from the assured day-to-day poems of her first collection, Leontia Flynn's second, Drives, is a book of restless journeys - real and imaginary - interspersed with a series of sonnets on writers. Beginning in Belfast, where she lives, she visits a disjointed number of cities in Europe and the States - each one the occasion for an elliptical postcard home to herself. Alongside these reports from abroad, portraits of dead writers flicker through the pages of this book - Baudelaire, Proust and Beckett; Bishop, Plath and Virginia Woolf - all revealing aspects of themselves, their frailties and their sicknesses, but also, we suspect, aspects of their ventriloquising author. What these poems share is a furious refusal of received opinion, of a language recycled and redundant; they are raw exposed and angrily aware of distance - the distance between what one needs and what one receives, between love and what is lost. In particular, the lives here are haunted by the lost idyll of childhood, while poems about the poet's own mother and ageing father bring the collection to a close.
Jonathan Cape 2008 pbk £9.00 ISBN 978-0224085175
Leontia Flynn
These Days These Days represents one of the most strikingly original debuts in recent years. A Gregory Award winner, Leontia Flynn - still in her twenties - writes about Belfast and the north of Ireland with a precision and tenderness that is completely fresh. While her subject matter ranges from memories of childhood to the instabilities of adulthood, from the raw domestic to the restless pull of 'elsewhere', her theme throughout is a search for physical and mental well-being, for a way to live a life. A number of exquisitely moving poems about her father highlight her extraordinary gifts: her exact ear, her heightened, filmic sensibility, her bittersweet tone - all of which combine in poems that are accessible but not obvious, witty and serious, delicate but tough, and always surprising. These Days is not simply a first book of great promise; it marks the arrival of a new, exciting and important voice.'The morning after Ruth's going-away partythe state of this place is its witness, like Pompeii.The needle snags on the record and then snags againand Karen Carpenter sings we've only, we've only just begun.'
2004 The Felix Dennis Prize for Best First Collection (Shortlist)
2004Winner of Poetry's Forward Prize 2004 Whitbread Book Prize (Shortlisted) Jonathan Cape 2004 pbk £8.00 ISBN 0-224-07197-1
Author details available at http://www.contemporarywriters.com/authors/?p=auth519D1A6E0527123872PwPj51C95A
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