The Poetry of Derek Mahon

The Poetry of Derek Mahon
Author: Hugh Haughton
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Total Pages: 416
Release: 2010-10-21
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 0191615587

Derek Mahon is one of the leading poets of his time, both in Ireland and beyond, famously offering a perspective that is displaced from as much as grounded in his native country. From prodigious beginnings to prolific maturity, he has been, through thick and thin, through troubled times and other, a writer profoundly committed to the art of poetry and the craft of making verse. He has also been no-less a committed reviser of his work, believing the poem to be more than a record in verse, but a work of art never finished. This virtuoso study by Hugh Haughton provides the most comprehensive account imaginable of Mahon's oeuvre. Haughton's brilliant writing always serves and illuminates the poetry, yielding extraordinary insights on almost every page. The poetry, its revisions and reception, are the subject here, but so thorough is the approach that what is offered also amounts indirectly to an intellectual biography of the poet and with it an account of Northern Irish poetry vital to our understanding of the times.

Selected Poems

Selected Poems
Author: Derek Mahon
Publisher: Penguin AudioBooks
Total Pages: 186
Release: 2006
Genre: English poetry
ISBN: 9780141026091

Represented in all modern anthologies by his great poem on Irish history A Disused Shed in Co. Wexford, Derek Mahon is regarded with Heaney and Longley as the leader of the resurgence of Irish poetry from the late `60s onwards. He writes lyric poetry of enormous wit, elegance and scepticism. Penguin published his first Selected Poemsin 1990 - this new, expanded edition revisits the older work but also contains important new work from his most recent volume, Harbour Lights.

Who Is Mary Sue?

Who Is Mary Sue?
Author: Sophie Collins
Publisher: Faber & Faber
Total Pages: 99
Release: 2018-02-06
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 0571346626

In the language of fan fiction, a 'Mary Sue' is an idealised and implausibly flawless character: a female archetype that can infuriate audiences for its perceived narcissism.Such is the setting for this brilliant and important debut by Sophie Collins. In a series of verse and prose collages, Who Is Mary Sue? exposes the presumptive politics behind writing and readership: the idea that men invent while women reflect; that a man writes of the world outside while a woman will turn to the interior.Part poetry and part reportage, at once playful and sincere, these fictive-factive miniatures deploy original writing and extant quotation in a mode of pure invention. In so doing, they lift up and lay down a revealing sequence of masks and mirrors that disturb the reflection of authority.A work of captivation and correction, this is a book that will resonate with anyone concerned with identity, shame, gender, trauma, composition and culture: everyone, in other words, who wishes to live openly and think fearlessly in the modern world. Who Is Mary Sue? is a work for our times and a question for our age: it is a handbook for all those willing to reimagine prescriptive notions of identity and selfhood.

WASHING UP.

WASHING UP.
Author: DEREK. MAHON
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2020
Genre:
ISBN: 9781911337904

An Autumn Wind

An Autumn Wind
Author: Derek Mahon
Publisher:
Total Pages: 80
Release: 2017
Genre: Irish poetry
ISBN: 9781911337409

After the Titanic

After the Titanic
Author: Stephen Enniss
Publisher: Gill Books
Total Pages: 329
Release: 2014
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780717164417

After the Titanic: A Life of Derek Mahon is a portrait of an artistic life in motion and stirring reflection on the capacity of great poetry to fashion something lasting of our deepest fears and insecurities.

The Hudson Letter

The Hudson Letter
Author: Derek Mahon
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1996
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 9780916390709

Out of this absence he writes from lower Manhattan, addressing, in ramble or vigil, his absent lover, his children in London, Auden, Yeast's father, and other cosmic vagrants, "clutching our bits and pieces, arrogant in dereliction". In the eighteen sections of "The Hudson Letter", the gabble of a dockside bar, voices of a recycled Sappho and of an Irish immigrant girl reassuring her mother in Inishannon, and the midwinter, allnight sounds of the City intersperse with the voice of the poet - lively, witty, poignant, elegiac, humane, and thoroughly human. "The Hudson Letter" is prefaced by four new poems in different voices.

The Yellow Book

The Yellow Book
Author: Derek Mahon
Publisher: Wake Forest University Press
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1998
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 9780916390822

In The Yellow Book, the home-seeking traveler--"a decadent who lived to tell the story"--finds lodgings in our fierce fin de siècle under the roof of his Dublin attic flat. Amid echoes from dead writers, "clouds of unknowing" from his "last Camel," and ghosts from his own life, the poet muses wisely and wittily on our wound-down decade and expiring double millennium. These twenty-one absorbing, sometimes mordantly funny, and always delightful meditations offer us both the distinctive details of our shared lives and a theoptic view from "windows flung wide on briny balconies/above an ocean of roofs and lighthouse beams;/like a storm lantern the wintry planet swings." ("Night Thought")