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ISBN: PB: 9781857544985

Carcanet

September 2000

320 pp.

21.6x13.5 cm

PB:
£14,95
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A.D.

A Trilogy of Plays on the Life of Jesus

Edwin Morgan, Scotland's best-loved poet, returns to the stage after his celebrated Phaedra with a powerful and shocking millennial examination of the life of Jesus Christ as a man among men.

Jesus, a human figure in an inhuman time, experiences all that a man can experience; Morgan departs from the Gospels in his exploration of how this Person came to know His world. His love affair with an unmarried woman, Helen, and a declaration of love from John, "the disciple whom Jesus loved", are in the larger character of Jesus that Morgan discovers. "My ambition is to tell a good story".

The year 2000 has been a triumphant annus mirabilis for Morgan, and A.D. is a fitting culmination; honest, candid and experimental in spiritual and linguistic terms. As the Scotsman said,
"Edwin Morgan is the most dynamic, brilliant, free-wheeling poet around, endlessly accessible and inventive, glorious refreshment".

About the Author

Edwin Morgan was Scotland's first national poet – Scotland's version of the Poet Laureate – and one of the best-loved and most significant poets of the twentieth century.

Born in Glasgow in on 27th April 1920, he was brought up in a comfortable middle class family with his father working as a clerk to a firm of ship breakers. From an early age Morgan was fascinated by, and passionate about words; he remembered his teachers complaining about the amount of work he would give them to mark. His early education was at Rutherglen Academy, then Glasgow High School. He was a resident of Glasgow for the duration of his life, apart from his six year service in the Middle East with the Royal Army Medical Corps. On his return he completed his Master's degree at Glasgow University before teaching there, becoming Professor of English in 1975. He retired as Professor Emeritus in 1980. He subsequently worked as a Visiting Professor at Strathclyde University (1987-1990) and also at the University of Wales, Aberystwyth (1991-1995). The poet Robert Crawford, a former pupil of Morgan's, remembers him as "an extremely lively teacher... incredibly focused on what his students were doing".

Morgan was an adept linguist, particularly in Russian, French, Italian, German, Spanish, Portuguese and Hungarian. This is demonstrated in his translations of Mayakovsky, Racine and Neruda, which he characteristically translated into robust Scots, and which appear in his Collected Translations.

His prolific career was also a prize-winning one. Morgan was awarded an OBE in 1982 and the Queen's Gold Medal for Poetry in 2000, and his collections have several times been selected as Poetry Book Society Choices and Recommendations. He was awarded the Royal Bank of Scotland Book of the Year Award in 1983, the Soros Translation Award (New York) in 1985 and won numerous Scottish Arts Council Book Awards. His poetry collection, Virtual and Other Realities, won the Stakis Prize for the Scottish Writer of the Year 1998. His final Carcanet collection, "A Book of Lives" (2007), won the Scottish Poetry Book of the Year award and was shortlisted for the T. S. Eliot Prize for Poetry.

Morgan's poetry is praised for its inventiveness and its moral and social observations. He wrote concrete and visual poetry, opera libretti and collaborated with jazz saxophonist Tommy Smith to put his work into music. His work is also renowned for its outwardly-looking internationalism, moving his poetic gaze from Europe to the wider world and into space, but always returning to his native Glasgow.

Edwin Morgan died in Glasgow on 19th August 2010, several months after celebrating his 90th birthday.

Reviews

Winner, 2000 Queen's Gold Medal for Poetry