The Man in the White Suit
The Man in the White Suit
paperback
Published:
29 April, 1999
Description
Prizes
Winner of Waterstone's Forward Poetry Prize for Best First Collection 1999
More Details
| Type | Book |
|---|---|
| ISBN13 | 9781852244880 |
| ISBN10 | 1852244887 |
| Number Of Pages | 64 |
| Item Weight | 109 g |
| Publisher / Reseller | Bloodaxe Books Ltd |
| Format | paperback |
Media Reviews
Nick Drake's début collection is subtle, funny and tremendously moving. He has an eye for the small detail as well as the big picture. These poems brilliantly evoke time and place… This is a collection that will resonate long after you have finished reading it. -- Jackie Kay
Nick Drake's first collection is impressively rich in character and narrative, bringing together a haunting array of mysterious figures and stories… Never sentimental, he is especially good at loneliness, absence and exile. -- Jamie McKendrick & Maura Dooley * PBS Bulletin *
Author's Bio
Nick Drake was born in 1961. He lives and works in London. His first book-length collection, The Man in the White Suit (Bloodaxe Books, 1999), was a Poetry Book Society Recommendation, won the Forward Prize for Best First Collection in 1999, and was selected for the Next Generation Poets promotion in 2004. From The Word Go was published by Bloodaxe Books in 2007. His recent projects include a stage adaptation of Philippe Petit’s To Reach the Cloud; the screenplay for the Australian film Romulus, My Father, starring Eric Bana, which won Best Film at the Australian Film Awards; Success, a play for the National Theatre's Connections project; and a trilogy of historical novels (Nefertiti, shortlisted for CWA Best Historical Crime Novel, Tutankhamun and Egypt: The Book of Chaos). In September 2010 he was invited to join Cape Farewell's trip to the Arctic to explore climate change, and from that journey arose a commission from United Visual Artists to create poems and texts for their ground-breaking installation High Arctic at the National Maritime Museum (2011). Those poems, together with others inspired by the Arctic and its voices, are gathered in his collection The Farewell Glacier (Bloodaxe Books, 2012). His fourth collection, Out of Range, was published by Bloodaxe in 2018. He is also a screenwriter, and worked as a librettist in a collaboration with the composer Tansy Davies and director Deborah Warner on Between Worlds, an opera inspired by the events of 9/11 premièred by English National Opera at the Barbican Theatre in April 2015, winner of the 2016 British Composers Award for Stage Work. A new music theatre collaboration with Tansy Davies followed, Cave, performed at Printworks London in June 2018.