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ISBN: PB: 9781784102760

Carcanet

May 2016

136 pp.

21.6x13.8 cm

PB:
£12,99
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Windows of Graceland

New and Selected Poems

"A few months ago?
the novelty mug frightened us all
by spontaneously bursting
into Viva Las Vegas and I took that?
as a sign, did what any?
Catholic would do – put up a shrine".
from Burnfort, Las Vegas

"The Windows of Graceland" gathers the cream of the crop from Martina Evans's five previous collections of poetry, brought up to date by a selection of new and unpublished work. The earliest poems date back to 1998 and Evans's expatriation from Ireland. A complex nostalgia for her Catholic childhood establishes a central and enduring thread in the writing, the bloody shadow of sectarian conflict commingling with a child's pastoral of pleated mustard kilts and corduroy paisley dresses, the "sighing country roads", the "blue Burnfort evening". The later poems, written from London, develop a fascination with Americana as the poet's own cultural displacement takes on substitute forms, the Irish traveller Elvis O'Donnell finding his unlikely double in that other Elvis, of Graceland. Early poems on childhood come full-circle across the selection's twenty-five year span in more recent poems on motherhood. When the poet's teenage daughter returns home missing a shoe, "I don't share her grief. / I feel relief / as if the shoe is a coin / paid to the wild / for her safe return". From story-teller to free-verse fili, memoirist to satirist, daughter to mother, "The Windows of Graceland" distils Evans's full poetic range and power.

About the Author

Martina Evans was born in 1961, the youngest of ten children, and grew up in County Cork. After training as a radiographer in Dublin she moved to London in 1988. Her first collection of poems, "The Inniscarra Bar and Cycle Rest", appeared in 1995 and was followed by three further collections, "All Alcoholics are Charmers" (1998), "Can Dentists Be Trusted?" (2004) and "Facing the Public" (2009). She teaches Creative Writing at the City Literary Institute and Birkbeck College. She is also the author of three novels: "Midnight Feast" (1996), "The Glass Mountain" (1997), "No Drinking No Dancing No Doctors" (2000) and the prose-poem/novella "Petrol" (2012). She lives in London with her daughter.