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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Jen HadfieldPublisher: Pan Macmillan Imprint: Picador Dimensions: Width: 15.40cm , Height: 1.20cm , Length: 19.80cm Weight: 0.180kg ISBN: 9781035032853ISBN 10: 1035032856 Pages: 128 Publication Date: 03 April 2025 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Not yet available ![]() This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of ContentsReviewsHadfield brings sensations to life; subtle and propulsive, her language fizzes and dashes -- Rishi Dastidar on <i>The Stone Age</i> * The Guardian * [Storm Pegs] is a bewitching book, tactile and immersive, riven with salt winds, alive with human oddities and loud with the cries of seabirds. Everything glows in the light of Hadfield’s words, from slimy sea molluscs to grand island vistas. * The Telegraph * There are as many creatures as people in Nigh-No-Place, and poems are more like brilliant snapshots than whole, poised works. The writing is all the better for this manifestation of energy . . . Hadfield's refreshing voice carries all the way from the top of Scotland to blow some of the dust off British verse. -- Stephen Knight on <i>Nigh-No-Place</i> * The Independent * There is something magical and incantatory in the way she cherishes language at the level of the name, as if utterance itself might be a way of dwelling in the real and making oneself at home there * The New Statesman * The Stone Age transports us to the bleakly beautiful landscape of Shetland, where she lives. Hers is an uncompromising eye which sees Soul in everything . . . Strange and challenging, these poems demand as much attention as the poet gives her world. * Daily Mail * Hadfield brings sensations to life; subtle and propulsive, her language fizzes and dashes -- Rishi Dastidar on <i>The Stone Age</i> * Guardian * [Storm Pegs] is a bewitching book, tactile and immersive, riven with salt winds, alive with human oddities and loud with the cries of seabirds. Everything glows in the light of Hadfield’s words, from slimy sea molluscs to grand island vistas. * Telegraph * There are as many creatures as people in Nigh-No-Place, and poems are more like brilliant snapshots than whole, poised works. The writing is all the better for this manifestation of energy . . . Hadfield's refreshing voice carries all the way from the top of Scotland to blow some of the dust off British verse. -- Stephen Knight on <i>Nigh-No-Place</i> * Independent * There is something magical and incantatory in the way she cherished language at the level of the name, as if utterance itself might be a way of dwelling in the real and making oneself at home there * New Statesman * The Stone Age transports us to the bleakly beautiful landscape of Shetland, where she lives. Hers is an uncompromising eye which sees Soul in everything . . . Strange and challenging, these poems demand as much attention as the poet gives her world. * Daily Mail * Author InformationAuthor Website: https://twitter.com/hadfield_jen?lang=enJen Hadfield lives in Shetland. Her first collection, Almanacs, won an Eric Gregory Award in 2003. Her second collection, Nigh-No-Place, won the T. S. Eliot Prize and was shortlisted for the Forward Prize for Best Collection. She won the Edwin Morgan Poetry Competition in 2012. Her collection The Stone Age won the Highland Book Prize in 2022. Tab Content 6Author Website: https://twitter.com/hadfield_jen?lang=enCountries AvailableAll regions |