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RESULTSSearching enCompass books for 'Robin Robertson'... We found 3 matches.
Robin Robertson
Slow Air Another powerful collection from the author of A Painted Field, which won the Forward Prize for Best First Collection. His main subject is his own detached, fierce, Scottish eye: on landscape and sea, on love, sex, violence. His use of language is deadpan, tense, precise, unforgiving.
Picador 2002 pbk £7.99 ISBN 0-330-48880-5
Author details available at http://www.contemporarywriters.com/authors/?p=auth519D193A0f10922310PmV1BB2F7F
http://www.poems.com/slowarob.htm
Robin Robertson
Swithering In Scots, the verb 'swither' has two meanings: to be doubtful, to waver, to be in two minds; and to appear in shifting forms - indeterminate and volatile. From disarmingly direct poems about the end of childhood to erotically charged lyrics about the ends of desire, Robertson's powerful third collection is stalked and haunted by both senses. Hard-edged, pitch-perfect, effortlessly various, Swithering is a book of brave and black romance, locating its voice in that space where great change is an ever-present possibility.
2006 Forward Poetry Prize
Picador 2006 pbk £8.99 ISBN 0-330-44168-X
Edited by Robin Robertson
Mortification Humiliation is not, of course, unique to writers. However, the world of letters does seem to offer a near-perfect micro-climate for embarrassment and shame. There is something about the conjunction of high-mindedness and low income that is inherently comic; something about the very idea of deeply private thoughts - carefully worked and honed into art over the years - being presented to a public audience of dubious strangers, that strays perilously close to tragedy.Here, in over 80 contributions, are stories about the writer's audience, the fellow readers, the organiser, the venue, the 'hospitality', or the often-interminable journey there and back. Then there are the experiences of teaching and being taught, reviewing and being reviewed, of festivals and writers' retreats, symposia, signing sessions, literary parties and prizes, the trips abroad, with all the attendant joys of translation and, finally, the bright worlds of television and radio that can bring so many more people to share in your shame.These are the best stories: those told against the teller. And for the reader, apart from the sheer schadenfreude of it all, there is admiration too: for that acknowledgement of human frailty, of punctured pride, and also of the seeming absurdity of trying to bring private art into public space. There are contributions from, amongst others, Margaret Atwood, Julian Barnes, Louis de Bernieres, Rick Moody, Irvine Welsh, Margaret Drabble and Norman Mailer.
Fourth Estate 2003 hbk £16.99 ISBN 0-00-717137-4
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