No matter how compelling her themes, with their demands of compassion and political conscience, Satyamurti never loses hold of her main topic: the capacity of language.

- Bernard O’Donoghue, Poetry London

Carole Satyamurti’s poems look to be stations on a road map of psychological discoveries, sometimes personal, sometimes objective and scientific. Her best poems are not so much confessions as meditations.

- Anne Stevenson, London Magazine

Her unobtrusive approach is deceptive – these poems have unexpected stings in their tails.

- Penelope Shuttle,

The Hopeful Hat is Carole Satyamurti's last collection. She was preparing these poems for publication at the time of her death, and left the manuscript in an advanced state of readiness. The sequencing of the poems, and the sections they are grouped in, had already been decided by her. These late poems are informed by Satyamurti's keen eye for social injustice and, equally, by the breadth of her compassion. Poignantly, they are also her nuanced poetic response to having her voice box removed following a diagnosis of laryngeal cancer. The poems' formal accomplishment is carried lightly; characteristically, it is this light touch that enables Satyamurti to move so deeply. Clear-eyed in the face of her own mortality, she produced a series of courageous poems that are, as Carol Ann Duffy said of her work, 'laced with the hard stuff'. They are also graced with Satyamurti's unique and subtle wit. The preface by the poet's daughter, Emma Satyamurti, places this collection in the larger context of four decades of published work, and provides an illuminating insight into the poems gathered together here. Poetry Book Society Recommendation.
Les mer
Final collection – published posthumously – by one of Britain’s most respected poets. Carole Satyamurti was preparing these poems for publication at the time of her death, and left the manuscript in an advanced state of readiness. Poetry Book Society Recommendation.
Les mer
7 Foreword by Emma Satyamurti 10 Acknowledgements I 13 The Hopeful Hat 14 Cans 15 How to Wash Dishes on the Eightfold Path 16 You Could Say 17 Obituary 19 Inheritance 20 Wednesday Again 21 New York 22 Easter 23 All that Is Solid Melts into Air II 27 Voicing the Void 28 New Year on T14 29 Glossal 30 Sea Change 31 Necklace of Wasps 32 Mother Tongue 33 Overtones III 37 Requiem for a Death Foretold 38 Small Change 39 Paper Boat 40 Vyasa’s Gift 41 Hold On 42 The Climate Game 43 War Rhyme 44 Grand IV 47 Debrief 48 Ought 49 Sight Reading 50 Succulent 52 Solitude 53 Shoreline 54 Le moment juste 55 It Turns Out 56 Happening 57 Less than Beautiful 58 April 59 Memento Mori 60 Endurance 61 Logically 62 Solid
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781780376530
Publisert
2023-02-23
Utgiver
Vendor
Bloodaxe Books Ltd
Høyde
216 mm
Bredde
138 mm
Dybde
7 mm
Aldersnivå
G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
64

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

Carole Satyamurti (1939-2019) was a poet and sociologist. For many years she taught at the Tavistock Clinic, where her main academic interest was in the relevance of psychoanalytic ideas to an understanding of the stories people tell about themselves, whether in formal autobiography or in social encounters. She co-edited Acquainted with the Night: psychoanalysis and the poetic imagination (Karnak, 2003). She won the National Poetry Competition in 1986, and a Cholmondeley Award in 2000. Her Mahabharata: A Modern Retelling (W.W. Norton, 2015), was joint winner of the inaugural Roehampton Poetry Prize. Her Bloodaxe retrospective, Stitching the Dark: New & Selected Poems (2005), drew on five collections: Broken Moon (1987), Changing the Subject (1990), Striking Distance (1994), Love and Variations (2000), and Stitching the Dark (2005). Two of these were Poetry Book Society Recommendations. This was followed by two later collections, Countdown (2011), and her final collection, The Hopeful Hat, also a Poetry Book Society Recommendation, published posthumously in 2023.