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ISBN: PB: 9781857547528

Carcanet

August 2004

96 pp.

22x13.5 cm

PB:
£8,95
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Pastorals

Peter McDonald invokes and explores the pastoral imagination, in love-poems and poems about grief, poems concerning remote history and the more recent past, and poems which find new shapes for our difficult, sometimes contradictory, relations to place and environment. Some longer pieces bring together these concerns: "The Victory Weekend" sets the London VE-Day anniversary celebrations in 1995 against an adolescence in Belfast, while "Eclogue" (an updating of Virgil) brings to post-Peace Process Belfast a debate between the exile and the stay-at-home.

McDonald's lyric variety and control (from sharp rhyming couplets to seventeenth-century heroic stanzas, from sonnets and unrhymed forms to Spenserian stanzas) make for memorable, sometimes haunted and unsettling, poetry.

"Pastorals" is Peter McDonald's first book for eight years, and confirms him as being among Ireland's most accomplished lyric poets.

About the Author

Peter McDonald was born and grew up in Belfast. He won the Newdigate Prize for Poetry and an Eric Gregory Award. A University teacher, he is currently Christopher Tower Student and Tutor in Poetry in the English Language at Christ Church, Oxford. A prominent critic of modern and contemporary poetry, he has published a book on Louis MacNeice, a study of Northern Irish poetry entitled Mistaken Identities, and, most recently, "Serious Poetry: Form and Authority from Yeats to Hill". He has edited MacNeice's Selected Plays, and is also the editor of the forthcoming new edition of MacNeice's "Collected Poems".

Reviews

"Peter McDonald's unsettling imagination occupies a middle distance between domesticity and wilderness – what he calls 'the melancholy distance'. His fine elegies and love poems have in common a cool intonation and an argumentative persistence: the overlap is a telling one. McDonald's disenchanted vision makes the moments of intimacy and tenderness, when they come, all the more affecting. In addition, his profound literary intelligence thrives on metrical and stanzaic challenge, and ranges with relish from gnomic brevity to sustained meditation, narrative and memoir. These poems, which with their gently syncopated lines may seem understated, register the uneasiness and the excitement of 'the buzzing world': they are, in the poet's own words, "back roads to everywhere" – Michael Longley