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Caitriona O'Reilly

    Catríona O’Reilly's work explores the liminal spaces between archaeology, mythology, and contemporary life. Her poetry frequently draws upon historical and scientific subjects, transforming them into evocative and atmospheric imagery. O’Reilly demonstrates a masterful command of language, crafting intricate layers of meaning and examining the resonances between past and present. Her writing is characterized by its intellectual depth and a remarkable ability to uncover unexpected connections within the fabric of everyday reality.

    Nowhere Birds
    The Sea Cabinet
    Geis
    • 2015

      Geis

      • 81 pages
      • 3 hours of reading

      Geis is a word from Irish mythology meaning a supernatural taboo or injunction on behavior. In her third volume of poetry (following the critically acclaimed The Nowhere Birds and The Sea Cabinet), Caitríona O'Reilly examines the geis in all of its psychological, emotional, and moral suggestiveness: exploring the prohibitions and compulsions under which we sometimes place ourselves, or find ourselves placed. Geis is the first appearance of a volume by Caitríona O'Reilly in North America, though she has been anthologized numerous times, including in The Wake Forest Series of Irish Poetry, Volume I (2005) and The Wake Forest Book of Irish Women's Poetry (2nd edition, 2011). In poems that range from the searingly personal to the more playfully abstract and philosophical, this poet's characteristic imaginative range and linguistic verve are everywhere in evidence. These are poems that question our sometimes tenuous links with the world, with others, and even with ourselves, but which ultimately celebrate the richness of experience and the power of language to affirm it.

      Geis
    • 2006

      The Sea Cabinet

      • 64 pages
      • 3 hours of reading
      3.9(10)Add rating

      Features poems on nature and history, including the vanished world of the whaling industry.

      The Sea Cabinet
    • 2001

      O'Reilly's 'The Nowhere Birds' introduces a young writer of remarkable maturity and narrative power. The book's holding pattern is set by questions of location and flight, beginning with views of childhood and adolescence, then moving outwards in poems of daring imaginative range-finding. schovat popis

      Nowhere Birds