The poet revels in a love of language; its capacity for ambiguity, for awe, to express emotional fragility. Sometimes playful and ambivalent, this is an invariably profound and excavating experience in its search for meaning.
- Linton Kwesi Johnson, Canon Mark Oakley and Clare Shaw,
Judges of the Ted Hughes Award 2018
Tishani Doshi’s third collection, Girls Are Coming Out of the Woods, chillingly conjures an uprising of dead women who refuse to be silent victims of male violence... Elsewhere, there are frank and moving poems about the experience of ageing and pressures on women to reproduce, as well as a playful imagined meeting with a young Elizabeth Bishop in Madras and an ode to Patrick Swayze.
- Sandeep Parmar,
The Guardian (Poetry Books of the Year 2018)
I've already read Tishani Doshi’s poetry collection Girls Are Coming Out of the Woods but I know I’ll return to it many times. One of the poems talks about poets ‘holding the throat of life/ till all the sunsets and lies are choked out/ till only the bones of truth remain’ - that’s precisely what Doshi does in this intelligent, elegant, unflinching collection. It’s very much a collection for this moment in history, but one that will endure long past it.
- Kamila Shamsie,
The Guardian (Best Summer Books 2018)
Girls Are Coming Out of the Woods is an unflinching collection of poems that weave between topics from violence against women to time and memory. Tishani Doshi's third full collection in English blends visceral power with artistic elegance, re-imagining form as it sifts through detail and emotion. It followed two earlier, highly praised collections, Everything Begins Elsewhere, published by Bloodaxe in 2012, and her debut, Countries of the Body, winner of the Forward Prize for Best First Collection. Tishani Doshi was shortlisted for the Ted Hughes Award 2018 for Girls Are Coming Out of the Woods and for her accompanying dance performance of the title poem. Poetry Book Society Recommendation. Her fourth collection, A God at the Door, was published in 2021.
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Girls Are Coming Out of the Woods is Tishani Doshi's third collection, following two earlier, highly praised collections, Everything Belongs Elsewhere, published by Bloodaxe in 2012, and her debut, Countries of the Body, winner of the Forward Prize for best first collection. Poetry Book Society Recommendation shortlisted for the Ted Hughes Prize.
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13 Contract
17 Summer in Madras
18 Rain at Three
19 A Fable for the 21st Century
20 What the Sea Brought In
21 How to be Happy in 101 days
24 Fear Management
25 Ode to Patrick Swayze
26 Everyone Loves a Dead Girl
28 Monsoon Poem
32 Abandon
33 To My First White Hairs
36 Considering Motherhood While Falling Off a Ladder in Rome
38 Love in the Time of Autolysis
40 Jungian Postcard
42 Girls Are Coming Out of the Woods
44 Strong Men, Riding Horses
46 Disco Biscuits
47 Honesty Hotel for Gents
48 My Grandmother Never Ate a Potato in Her Life
50 Your Body Language is not Indian! or, Where I Am Snubbed
at a Cocktail Party by a Bharatanatyam Dancer
52 Saturday on the Scores
54 The Women of the Shin Yang Park Sauna, Gwangju
55 Tranås
56 Encounters with a Swedish Burglar
57 Pig-killing in Viet-Hai
60 Calcutta Canzone
62 Understanding My Fate in a Mexican Museum
64 Dinner Conversations
66 The Leather of Love
70 O Great Beauties!
73 Clumps of Happiness
74 Meeting Elizabeth Bishop in Madras
76 Grandmothers Abroad
78 Poem for a Dead Dog
80 Find the Poets
82 The Day Night Died
83 Coastal Life
84 The View From Inside My Coffin
87 Portrait of the Poet as a Reclining God
91 When I Was Still a Poet
95 Biographical note
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The poet revels in a love of language; its capacity for ambiguity, for awe, to express emotional fragility. Sometimes playful and ambivalent, this is an invariably profound and excavating experience in its search for meaning.
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Produktdetaljer
Utgiver
Vendor
Bloodaxe Books Ltd
Om bidragsyterne
Tishani Doshi is an award-winning poet and dancer of Welsh-Gujarati descent. She was born in Madras, India, in 1975. She received her masters in writing from the Johns Hopkins University in America and worked in London in advertising before returning to India in 2001 to work with the choreographer Chandralekha, with whom she performed on many international stages. An avid traveller, she has been trekking in the Ethiopian Bale Mountains, visited Antarctica with a group of high-school students, and documented the largest transgender gathering in Koovakam. She has written about her travels in newspapers such as the Guardian, International Herald Tribune, The Hindu and the Financial Times. She won an Eric Gregory Award for her poetry in 2001. In 2006, she won the All-India Poetry Competition, and her debut collection, Countries of the Body (Aark Arts), won the Forward Prize for Best First Collection. Her first novel, The Pleasure Seekers (Bloomsbury, 2010), was longlisted for the Orange Prize and shortlisted for the Hindu Fiction Award, and has been translated into several languages. Her second poetry collection, Everything Begins Elsewhere, was published by Bloodaxe Books in 2012. Fountainville: new stories from the Mabinogion was published by Seren in 2013. Her third collection, Girls Are Coming Out of the Woods (Bloodaxe Books, 2018), is a Poetry Book Society Recommendation and was shortlisted for the Ted Hughes Award for New Work in Poetry 2018 in the UK, and for the poetry category of the 2019 Firecracker Awards in the US. Her second novel, Small Days and Nights (Bloomsbury, 2019), was shortlisted for the RSL Ondaatje Prize. Her fourth poetry collection, A God at the Door (Bloodaxe Books, 2021), was shortlisted for the 2021 Forward Prize for Best Collection. Tishani Doshi lives on a beach between two fishing villages in Tamil Nadu with her husband and dogs. She is currently Visiting Associate Professor of Practice, Literature and Creative Writing at New York University, Abu Dhabi.