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Soul Feast :nourishing poems of hope & light: a companion anthology to Soul Food
Soul Feast :nourishing poems of hope & light: a companion anthology to Soul Food
paperback
Published:
21 March, 2024
Description
More Details
| Type | Book |
|---|---|
| ISBN13 | 9781780377063 |
| ISBN10 | 1780377061 |
| Number Of Pages | 160 |
| Item Weight | 1000 g |
| Product Dimensions | 174 x 163 x 11 mm |
| Publisher / Reseller | Bloodaxe Books Ltd |
| Format | paperback |
| Edition | Paperback original |
Media Reviews
Consolation is a rare quality in our tragic times, but sometimes poetry can provide a sanctuary. Bloodaxe Books, which often sets a creative pace in poetry publishing, offers “nourishing poems of hope and light” in its anthology Soul Feast. This gathers roughly 100 poets from many countries into an ambitious collection, edited by the Bloodaxe founder Neil Astley, and the artist, filmmaker, and translator Pamela Robertson-Pearce. Each poem feels chosen with intelligence and care: accessibility matches profundity. […] a searching anthology that is both elegy, and celebration.
-- Martyn Halsall * Church Times *In the end, the proof of a Soul Feast has to be in the eating, and I’ve got to admit that, even for an old cynic like me, the whole experience of sitting down and partaking was actually, well… ‘nourishing’.
-- Stuart Henson * London Grip *It [Soul Feast] would certainly make a perfect Christmas present for someone you’re fond of.
-- Greg Freeman * Write Out Loud *Author's Bio
Neil Astley and Pamela Robertson-Pearce are co-editors of the Bloodaxe anthologies Soul Food (2007) and Soul Feast (2024), and also collaborated on the DVD-books In Person: 30 Poets (2008) and In Person: World Poets (2017). Neil Astley is editor of Bloodaxe Books which he founded in 1978. His books include many anthologies, most notably those in the Staying Alive series: Staying Alive (2002), Being Alive (2004), Being Human (2011) and Staying Human (2020). He received an Eric Gregory Award for his poetry, and has published two poetry collections, Darwin Survivor and Biting My Tongue, as well as two novels, The End of My Tether (shortlisted for the Whitbread First Novel Award), and The Sheep Who Changed the World. He was honoured with a D.Litt by Newcastle University for his work with Bloodaxe Books, and in 2018 was made an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. He lives in Northumberland. Pamela Robertson-Pearce is an artist, filmmaker and translator. Her films include Imago: Meret Oppenheim (1996), on the artist who made the fur-lined teacup, and Gifted Beauty (2000), about Surrealist women artists including Leonora Carrington and Remedios Varo. Imago: Meret Oppenheim won several awards, including the Swiss Film Board’s Prize for Outstanding Quality and the Gold Apple Award at the National Educational Film and Video Festival in America. She has shown her work in solo exhibitions in New York and Provincetown (Cape Cod), and in various group shows in the US and Europe. Born in Stockholm, she grew up in Sweden, Spain and England, and then for over 20 years lived mostly in America – also working in Switzerland, Norway and Albania – before moving to Northumberland.