Cormorant

Author:   Elizabeth Parker
Publisher:   Poetry Wales Press
ISBN:  

9781781727362


Pages:   55
Publication Date:   26 February 2024
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Cormorant


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Overview

Elizabeth Parker's second collection, Cormorant, explores the bird of the title from all angles: from diving cormorants to cormorants in flight, cormorants in motion and also in stillness. The bird itself however is always untameable and irreducible to human impressions, but it becomes bound up with a family history, legacy, and losses. Human relationships, seen through the varying lenses of family, are a key focus of this collection. In 'You Began', the poet tells her sons of their ancestors from Ireland who crossed the Irish Sea to Liverpool Docks. The poem follows a lineage through place from The Black Country, the bloodlines meeting in London, then The Forest Of Dean, and finally coming to the boys' mother, the poet, who has made her home in Bristol, a city which becomes a larger-than-life character in the book. Family is all-important and other poems in Cormorant tell of family rituals as in 'Paddy's Ashes' where a grandfather's remains are scattered to the wind. Sometimes rituals are more everyday, as in 'Saturday' where the poet's mother remembers her own mother and the routine of shopping in Liverpool. These small joys are balanced by grief for example in poems about a father suffering dementia, and by the theme of loss generally as the book is dedicated to the poet's late sister, Helen. The cormorant is the present and past, both part of and beyond these human stories. 'It is 'The Devil Bird' ('Dart'). Gathered together in a tree, cormorants are 'omens in a dying beech' ('Cormorant'), or in the water they are the bubble of an underwater diver, the enemy of anglers, or perhaps just an elusive subject watched by humans. Parker plays close attention to the city of Bristol and its inhabitants whether they are human or more-than-human. There is a powerful depth to place here, which is full of carefully observed details about an independent natural world and how humans interact with it. This is also a formally playful and innovative collection. Sequences, repetition, and echoes are original techniques used to circle around the collection's main themes. 'Braids' uses the image of plaiting to weave together images and feeling, and to act as the central metaphor expressive of the closeness of the women speaking. Like many others in the collection, it is also a nature poem, where the braided hair of the women flows alongside the River Wye which runs through this collection. Through examinations of nature and the human, their shared losses and histories, Parker shows us how to regard the world humanely, compassionately. As she regards the miracle of the cormorant, she reminds us of the importance of wonder, offering an uplifting antidote to difficult times.

Full Product Details

Author:   Elizabeth Parker
Publisher:   Poetry Wales Press
Imprint:   Seren
Dimensions:   Width: 13.80cm , Height: 1.20cm , Length: 21.60cm
ISBN:  

9781781727362


ISBN 10:   1781727368
Pages:   55
Publication Date:   26 February 2024
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Reviews

'Dig, Parker does, into genealogy, history, and the land, freighting her poems with these connections.' ;PN REVIEW;'Hers is a dexterous poetry of confidently-conjured atmospheres and moods, at once elusive and heady with lyric invention.';MARTIN MALONE, THE INTERPRETER'S HOUSE;'A rising star of British poetry.';DAVID MORLEY (WINNER OF THE TED HUGHES AWARD);


‘Dig, Parker does, into genealogy, history, and the land, freighting her poems with these connections.’ ;PN REVIEW;‘Hers is a dexterous poetry of confidently-conjured atmospheres and moods, at once elusive and heady with lyric invention.’;MARTIN MALONE, THE INTERPRETER’S HOUSE;‘A rising star of British poetry.’;DAVID MORLEY (WINNER OF THE TED HUGHES AWARD);


Author Information

Elizabeth Parker was born in London and grew up in Pygmy Pinetum Garden Nurseries, a garden centre in The Forest of Dean. She attended Monmouth Comprehensive School in Wales and school trips to Ty Newydd writing centre nurtured her passion for creative writing. She achieved First Class Honours in English and Creative Writing at Warwick University, under the inspiring tutelage of David Morley, Maureen Freeley and Peter Blegvad. She has an MA in Mythology from Bristol University. She lives in Bristol with her partner and two sons. Elizabeth was a secondary school English teacher for eight years and is writing two novels based on her experiences teaching Shakespeare to teenagers. Elizabeth's poetry has been published in various journals including Magma, The Stony Thursday Book, The Interpreter's House, Poetry Salzburg and Agenda. She has been shortlisted for various prizes, including the Gregory O'Donoghue International Poetry Competition and The Bridport Prize. She was a prizewinner in the 2016 Troubadour International Poetry Prize. Following her 2016 pamphlet, Antinopolis (published by Eyewear), Elizabeth's first full collection, In Her Shambles, was published by Seren Books in April 2018. Elizabeth is a founding member of Bristol poetry quartet The Spoke, who perform their work at festivals and events. She is also co-host of monthly Bristol poetry event Under The Red Guitar. Her second collection, Cormorant, is due to be published by Seren in February 2024.

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