'Thank you, O golden mother, / For giving me a life,' says Paul Durcan in this brilliant new collection, a poignant tribute to 'the first woman I ever knew'. Sheila MacBride came from a political family - her uncle John MacBride was executed in 1916 for his part in the Easter Uprising - but when Sheila married into the 'black, red-roaring, fighting Durcans of Mayo' she was obliged to give up a promising legal career. These poems commemorate his mother as Paul Durcan remembers her playing golf, reading Tolstoy, and initiating him in the magic of the cinema. He recalls her compassion and loyalty when he was committed to a mental hospital in adolescence and how she endured the ordeal of her old age. Durcan also muses upon the beauty of Greek women and questions our need for newspapers and the new religion of golf. He is beguiled by a beggar woman, enraged by a young man picking his nose on the Dublin-Sligo commuter train, and gets into difficulty at the security gate of Dublin airport.
"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.
Review:
"The world is all the richer for this man’s verse" (Irish Independent)
"Durcan’s voice speaks clearly on the page in poems of harrowing intimacy, politics and love" (Carol Ann Duffy)
"Paul Durcan's Ireland is the one we inhabit. At times he is ready to celebrate the bizarre and the ordinary; at other times he is full of a surreal rage against both order and disorder" (Colm Tóibín Times Literary Supplement)
"Risky, complex, full of compassion, Durcan's interrogations of storytelling itself, of the juxtapositions and confluences of personal history and political struggle, are a bristling tour de force" (Deryn Rees-Jones Independent)
"Durcan's importance as a writer, and his uniqueness, are still reassuringly evident" (Guardian)
Book Description:
An outstanding collection of personal poems from one of Ireland's best-loved poets
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.
- PublisherHarvill Secker
- Publication date2012
- ISBN 10 1846557534
- ISBN 13 9781846557538
- BindingPaperback
- Number of pages144
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Rating