Maura Dooleyová se ve své tvorbě zaměřuje na zachycení každodenních okamžiků a jejich proměnu v něco pozoruhodného. Její básně často zkoumají témata paměti, vztahů a propojení mezi vnitřním světem jedince a vnějším prostředím. Dooleyová vyniká svou schopností používat živý a precizní jazyk, který čtenáře vtáhne do jemných nuancí lidské zkušenosti. Její poetický styl je zároveň přístupný a hluboce rezonující, což z ní činí významnou postavu současné poezie.
The Honey Gatherers takes its title from a phrase in Michael Ondaatje’s The
Cinnamon Peeler, a poem which describesthe need to be marked, and marked out,
by love. The search, the sweetness, the sting and the death of love, are allto
be found in this anthology. schovat popis
Features poems that take in the physical landscape, family and friendship, as
well as the transience of both folklore and politics. This work, in part, is
an attempt to speak of what is submerged, they welcome that 'splash of cold
water to the face' that tells us we're alive.
An anthology of the best of new British and Irish women poets of the '90s. This is a perfect introduction to some of the fresh new voices coming out of Britain and Ireland. These thirty women all published their first books in this decade.
'Considering the Donkey Cart' Here is the horse and carriage of a modest household the means of escape on muddy days, drab days, days when to whisper into the tender ears that Midas wore, to tickle behind the teasing ears that Bottom desported was to know the thrill of the open gate, the bright road stretching away. Ah Jack! Ah Jenny! Ra chose you, Jesus chose you, Sancho chose you but who can coax your bony back, your stony look, uncomfortable, unbiddable, mired happily, enduring, eschewing the tasty barley, chewing a thistle, who can tempt you to carry the king with the golden crown or lift these sisters' spirits with a day in Town? "Her poems are themselves acts of displacement, turning around some event or emotion that cannot be fully named or known...an imagination which proliferates mysteries" - Jon Cook, Independent on Sunday
Dooley's first new collection since her Eliot-shortlisted Life Under Water
(2008). Poems on looking in, looking out, looking through, on shifting light
and what it reveals, reflects or conceals - and what remains.
Maura Dooley's poetry is renowned for embracing both lyricism and political
consciousness, for its fusion of head and heart. Five Fifty-Five is a book of
quizzical poems concerned with time and mortality which ask fundamental
questions about our lives. It is her sixth collection, her first since The
Silvering (2016).