In These Days of Prohibition

4.22 ( 92 Ratings by Goodreads)
In These Days of Prohibition

In These Days of Prohibition

4.22 (92 Ratings by Goodreads)
paperback
Published: 27 July, 2017
Standard worldwide delivery by Thu, June 18 - Tue, June 23
Order within 0
Condition: NEW
$17.50
Price includes shipping
Available 2 in stock
- +
FREE Returns within 30 days

Description

Shortlisted for the 2017 Ted Hughes Award
Shortlisted for the 2017 T.S. Eliot Prize


In These Days of Prohibition
is Caroline Bird’s fifth Carcanet collection. As always, she is a poet of dark hilarity and telling social comment. Shifting between poetic and vulgar registers, the surreal imagery of her early work is re-deployed to venture into the badlands of the human psyche. Her poems hold their subjects in an unflinching grip, addressing faces behind the veneer, asking what it is that keeps us alive. These days of prohibition are days of intoxication and inebriation, rehab in a desert and adultery for atheists, until finally Bird edges us out of danger, ‘revving on a wish’.
Prizes

Short-listed for T.S. Eliot Prize 2017,Short-listed for Ted Hughes Award for New Poetry 2017

See more

More Details

Type Book
ISBN13 9781784104788
ISBN10 1784104787
Number Of Pages 64
Item Weight 1000 g
Product Dimensions 135 x 216 x 7 mm
Publisher / Reseller Carcanet Press Ltd
Format paperback
See More +

Media Reviews

'The poems of In These Days of Prohibition are disquieting: institutionalised, hedonistic, vacuous and nihilistic. The collection takes a hard look at contemporary society but is, ultimately, uplifting. If Brett Easton Ellis wrote poems, I'd like to think they'd be poems like these.'
John Field in the 2017 T.S. Eliot Prize shortlist newsletter


'The poems in this, Bird's fifth collection, explode on the page, bristling with a vision of sanity within madness, order within chaos. She has the ability to describe a tortured soul in a twenty-first century manner, bringing humour, contemporary idiom and irony into the work.'
Dundee University Review of the Arts


'Since she published her debut aged 15 in 2002, Bird's witty writing has been wrongly dismissed in some quarters as lightweight. This brave eighth collection (a slant account of her year in rehab) proves those critics wrong from its first page.'
Tristram Fane Saunders, The Daily Telegraph


'Achieves serious funniness by filtering mental illness and addiction through the prism of pop-surrealism.'
Jeremy Noel-Tod, The Sunday Times


'Caroline Bird's In These Days of Prohibition is equally pleasurable and disturbing, because it understands the genuinely strange ground on which we must build our thoughts and our emotions. In work of great and frequently comic poise it captures moments of absolute loss of control, and absolute freedom. We recognise that sustained unsettling comic virtuosity is the startling agent by which we engage with such loss, such freedom.'
W.N Herbert (Chair of the 2017 T.S. Eliot Prize Judging Panel)


'Bird is a master of bleak humour interlaced with wry social commentary.'
Poetry London


'Caroline Bird's is an unquestionably vigorous and original voice'
Suzannah V. Evans, The TLS


'If for Wallace Stevens poetry was the 'Supreme Fiction', Robert Lowell argued 'why not say what happened?' Bird, however, grabs Confessionalism by the throat to produce a surreal if formally controlled autobiography.'
Julian Stannard, The Poetry Review

Show more

Author's Bio

Caroline Bird has seven previous volumes published by Carcanet. Her sixth collection, The Air Year, won the Forward Prize for Best Collection 2020 and was shortlisted for the Polari Prize and the Costa Prize. Her fifth collection, In These Days of Prohibition, was shortlisted for the 2017 TS Eliot Prize and the Ted Hughes Award. A two-time winner of the Foyles Young Poets Award, her first collection Looking Through Letterboxes was published in 2002 when she was 15. She won an Eric Gregory Award in 2002 and was shortlisted for the Geoffrey Dearmer Prize in 2001 and the Dylan Thomas Prize in 2008 and 2010. She was one of the five official poets at the 2012 London Olympics.In 2023, she won a Cholmondeley Award. Her Selected Poems, Rookie, was published in 2022.

Show more