Authors: Fleur Adcock
FLEUR ADCOCK
POEMS 1960-2000
Fleur Adcock is one of Britain’s most accomplished poets. Her poised, ironic poems are tense and tightly controlled as well as shrewdly laconic, and often chilling as she unmasks the deceptions of love or unravels family lives. Disarmingly conversational in style, they are remarkable for their psychological insight and their unsentimental, mischievously casual view of personal relationships.
Born in New Zealand, she has explored questions of identity and rootedness throughout her work, both in relation to her personal allegiances to her native and adopted countries as well as her family history, whose long-dead characters she brings to life. She has also written movingly of birth, death and bereavement, and has tackled political issues with honest indignation and caustic wit.
This first Collected edition of her poetry replaces her
Selected Poems
, with the addition of work from her later Oxford collections
The Incident Book, Time-Zones
and
Looking Back
. It does not cover her later collection
Dragon
Talk
(2010)
‘Adcock has a deceptively laid-back tone, through which the sharper edge of her talent is encountered like a razor blade in a peach’ –
CAROL ANN DUFFY
,
Guardian
‘Adcock’s reputation has been founded on her spare, conversational poems, in which the style is deceptively simple, apparently translucent…a voice which teases both reader and subject’ –
JO
SHAPCOTT
,
TLS
‘Most of Fleur Adcock’s best poems have something to do with bed: she writes well about sex, very well about illness, and very well indeed about dreaming…Her imagination thrives on what threatens her peace of mind, and only when she is unguarded can these threats have their full creative effect…Throughout her writing life, she has made a fine art from holding on to principles of orderliness and good clear sense; but she has made an even finer one from loosening her grip on them’ –
ANDREW MOTION
,
TLS
COVER PAINTING
:
Hans Holbein the Younger (1497/8-1543) :
A Lady with a Squirrel and a Starling
©
NATIONAL GALLERY, LONDON
Fleur Adcock
The Eye of the Hurricane (1964)
AND
Tigers (1967)
Composition for Words and Paint
High Tide in the Garden (1971)
On a Son Returned to New Zealand
Train from the Hook of Holland
At the Creative Writing Course
The Ex-Queen Among the Astronomers
Having No Mind for the Same Poem
Variations on a Theme of Horace
Piano Concerto in E Flat Major
Danger: Swimming and Boating Prohibited