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Book review: The Other Side – The Poetry Society


Glyn Maxwell,
Alan Gillis,
Ben Wilkinson on poetic voice, formal prowess, and strange times
. . .
Paul Farley took the pulse at the turn of our millennium when he quipped that contemporary poets haven’t had criticism, they’ve had marketing. In an age where marketing’s role in matters aesthetic is ever-increasing, the individual voice can be an overvalued commodity, playing to a perceived appetite for poet-as-author. It is refreshing, then, to encounter Glyn Maxwell’s
How the Hell Are You, a collection of poems whose unfashionably complex play with poetic voice recognises and exploits the ultimate impersonality of writing – how it is only ever language that speaks, acts, and performs. But then Maxwell has always done his own thing, ever since he set the empty roundabout spinning in the first poem of his first collection, some thirty years ago. Formally dextrous, syntactically inventive, able to combine authentic emotion with self-reflexive dramatisa ....

United Kingdom , Alan Gillis , Ben Wilkinson , Paul Farley , Ciaran Carson , Don Paterson , Vera Lynn , Glyn Maxwell , Hell Are You , Hide Now , Bluebirds Over , First Old Book He Read , Northern Irish , Like Maxwell , Blossom Drift , Manchester Arena , Flat White Afternoon , Same Difference , Poetry Review , ஒன்றுபட்டது கிஂக்டம் , ஆலன் கில்லிஸ் , பென் வில்கின்சன் , பால் ஃபார்லீ , தாதா பேட்டர்சன் , வேரா லின் , க்ளின் மேக்ஸ்வெல் ,

TS Eliot Prize 2021: who will win the biggest award in poetry?


Top 10: the TS Eliot Prize shortlist
Each year, the T S Eliot Prize offers poets a chance to win a huge sack of cash, and critics a chance to generalise about trends in poetry. So here goes: long fragmentary narratives are in, love poems are out (though Natalie Diaz unfashionably flies the flag for sensual abandon). Who’ll win the £25,000 prize? If I were judging, it’d be Sasha Dugdale or Shane McCrae. But I’m not, so I’d bet on Diaz, with a side-flutter on Bhanu Kapil.
I’m sore about the omission of Timothy Donnelly’s superb The Problem of the Many, and wouldn’t have minded a bit of light relief (Caroline Bird, say, or Matthew Welton) but otherwise this is a strong and unusually ambitious list. Like last year, and the year before, and the year before that, half the nominees are university dons, but this year the books ....

United States , Harris Granta , Matthew Welton , Shane Mccrae , Natalie Diaz Faber , Daisy Lafarge Granta , Natalie Diaz , Jim Limber , Jo Morgan Jonathan , Bhanu Kapil , Wayne Holloway Smith Bloodaxe , Eric Gill , Jefferson Davies , Caroline Bird , Andrew Mcmillan , Timothy Donnelly , Bhanu Kapil Liverpool University , Sasha Dugdale , Life Without Air , Love Poem , Fort Mojave Indian Village , Ella Frears , Wofford Road , Will Harris , Minus Love , Wayne Holloway Smith ,