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... 67 poets take on 'indigo' "The term "indigomania" was coined for the Impressionists' "unhealthy" passion for blues." from 'The essence of blue' by Belinda Recio and Catherine Kouts "... "One year one paints violet and people scream, and the following year every one paints a great deal of violet," Manet remarked on a different occasion." from 'Color in the Age of Impressionism: Commerce, Technology, and Art' by Laura Anne Kalba
Presenting the best poems from the nationwide Places of Poetry project, selected from over 7,500 entries Poetry lives in the veins of Britain, its farms and moors, its motorways and waterways, highlands and beaches. This anthology brings together time-honoured classics with some of the best new writing collected across the nation, from great monuments to forgotten byways. Featuring new writing from Kayo Chingonyi, Gillian Clarke, Zaffar Kunial, Jo Bell and Jen Hadfield, Places of Poetry is a celebration of the strangeness and variety of our islands, their rich history and momentous present.
A poetry anthology to aid the work of MACMILLAN CANCER SUPPORT Including 2012 T S Eliot Prize Winner SHARON OLDS Nobel Prize in Literature winner SEAMUS HEANEY Supporters BOB DYLAN, LEONARD COHEN and JONI MITCHELL Grammy Award winning Renaissance Woman MAYA ANGELOU 2010 T S Eliot shortlisted poet PASCALE PETIT Cholmondeley Award winners PENELOPE SHUTTLE and MONIZA ALVI World renowned poet and performer BENJAMIN ZEPHANIAH Classic poets including Betjeman, Dylan Thomas, Yeats, Wordsworth, Byron, Pushkin, Housman, Browning, Keats, Clare, Donne and many more... PLUS established and new poets who believe in the cause... Heart Shoots has 'love' as the general theme of the majority of poems. It has been compiled by us to reach all members of the buying public, from those who are familiar with the best poets writing today, the millions of fans that follow Bob Dylan et al, and those millions of people who support the work of Macmillan and want to read accessible poetry that they can relate to.
From Egyptian wall paintings to the Venetian Renaissance, impressionism to digital images, Philip Ball tells the fascinating story of how art, chemistry, and technology have interacted throughout the ages to render the gorgeous hues we admire on our walls and in our museums. Finalist for the 2002 National Book Critics Circle Award.
An unhappy soldier guards the barracks gate in Brisbane and wishes for freedom ... a recovering addict in Fremantle learns about life, death and friendship while trying to get his life together in NA ... an Adelaide man's recently deceased uncle teaches him about the meaning of life ... and a girl vanishes somewhere near Alice Springs, never to be seen again. These are just some of the characters in Lewis Woolston's new story collection 'Remembering the Dead and Other Stories'. In these snapshots from the fringes of Australian society, the past is never entirely done, the dead are not forgotten, and life takes turns both funny and tragic.
"From the limitless imagination of Nod Ghosh, we readers are gifted with three novellas of impressive scope and depth. These narratives, deftly distilled and interwoven, speak to the vagaries of love and loss, of betrayal and intrigue. Brilliant, dark, and riveting, 'Filthy Sucre' is a collection by one of our best writers at the height of her powers." Kathy Fish, author of 'Wild Life: Collected Works from 2003-2018' "Nod Ghosh knows how to unspool a tale that keeps us turning pages, missing train stops, and binge-reading way into the night. The three flash novellas of 'Filthy Sucre' entice us into complex liaisons both acrid and sweet; to read her work is to become complicit in her clever webs of dysfunction, where guilt and innocence lose their boundaries and human nature is laid bare." Nancy Stohlman, author of 'Madam Velvet's Cabaret of Oddities' and 'The Vixen Scream and other Bible Stories'
""Every word has gone through endless exacting rehearsals to shine. These are poems not only to be read, but to be memorized."" John-Ivan Palmer, author of 'Motels of Burning Madness' ""Captures sentiment and observance in cunning detail, wit, and elegance."" Marge Barrett, author of 'My Memoir Dress' ""The very finest of wordsmith sizzle."" Ted King, author of 'New Beat' and 'Coyote' ""The seismic deluge continues, page after page, until the very final word crashes in and spreads across the sand."" 'The Write Launch Literary Magazine' Find preview snippets of 'Dollhouse Masquerade' here: https: //truthserumpress.net/tastesof/a-taste-of-dollhouse-masquerade/ Find 'Dollhouse Masquerade' at Truth Serum Press here: https: //truthserumpress.net/catalogue/fiction/dollhouse-masquerade/
15 short stories by Eddy Knight, based in and around Port Adelaide, South Australia. "Eddy Knight's semi-autobiographical stories are plugged with a hidden charge, always about to set off a chain of curiosities or minor tragedies which form the universal abyss of ordinary life. Throughout there is a formation of subjectivity, a stillness of observation working as a "speaking wound" which is suffered through quiet sensitivity and authenticity of experience. This is a great mapping of Port Adelaide and its surroundings, of its estuarine effluvia, both human and environmental, redeemed by the plucky melancholia of its characters transcending their histories through memory and empathy. 'A Short Walk to the Sea' is an impressive dissent against ignorance of the human condition." Brian Castro (Recipient of the 2014 Patrick White Award for his contribution to Australian Literature)
""At first glance Claire Hopple's stories appear delightfully off kilter, even laugh-out-loud funny, but the flashes of wisdom start early in this collection and they don't stop. This is a world of constant disorientation where people aim for connection and gamble on intimacy, no matter how precarious. Hopple's small towns are in decline and her families are fragile. Everybody lives here: older relatives who unravel or disappear; a sibling tipping over into frightening criminality; three generations of women with the same name in the same house who manage to lose each other; a hitchhiker who proves the lie of American life; a couple of friends from childhood, forever connected in a web of communal memory. After watching Hopple's characters question the scripts they've been handed, we are left to marvel at the hard work of being lost."" Jan Stinchcomb, author of 'Find the Girl'