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Jen Hadfield

    Storm Pegs
    Byssus
    The Stone Age
    Selected Poems
    Nigh-No-Place
    Almanacs
    • a mythic scrapbook, bag of cats, a one-man band...Jen Hadfield's Almanacs is concerned with lists, rules and archetypes and what they don't account for. It takes as its subjects the Tarot, the lore of Full Moons, weather myths and travellers' tales. The book's central sequence, Lorelei's Lore, is a road movie in poems, set in the north of Ultima Thule, hijacked by elusive sirens and Harrier jets. There's the ruthless Lorelei, gorgeous Ghosty who's given up on everything except the Road, and Skerryman, patron saint of bad weather and absence-makes-the-heart-grow-fonder. It's obsessed with yearning, like the two seas separated by the tip of Shetland 'metres apart/and desperate for each other.' Lorelei's Lore wonders 'what's beautiful?' (tarmac? sheep carcasses? sunburn?) and 'where's your native home?'

      Almanacs
    • Nigh-No-Place

      • 64 pages
      • 3 hours of reading
      3.9(105)Add rating

      Features the liturgy of a poet passionately aware of the natural world. This book tells about the author's travel across Canada with a ravenous appetite for new landscapes. It tells that it is in Shetland that she becomes acutely aware of her own voice - her fluency and tongue-tiedness; repetition, hiatus and breath.

      Nigh-No-Place
    • Selected Poems

      • 160 pages
      • 6 hours of reading

      Recipient of the Windham Campbell Prize for Poetry 2024Jen Hadfield is increasingly recognised as one of the singular poetic voices of our time, admired for the sheer vitality of her style and for her devotion to the natural world. Selected Poems offers a welcome retrospective, charting her development from the youthful wanderlust of Almanacs, through the incantatory praise songs of Nigh-No-Place for which she became the youngest ever winner of the T.S. Eliot Prize. Hadfield’s poetics are rooted in a panpsychist kinship with the non-human – a keen sensitivity to the consciousness that surrounds us, as she coaxes into language the essence of each thing. Nowhere is this more evident than in her rapt dialogue with the Shetland archipelago, translating its wild and abundant beauty, its idiosyncrasies and mythologies. ‘Home’, she writes, ‘is about using poetry to fashion myself a bivouac in the here and now, against the continual losses of the present tense’. Gathering poems from across the poet’s four collections alongside previously unpublished material, Selected Poems is a generous offering from one of our foremost poets of the natural world.

      Selected Poems
    • The Stone Age

      • 80 pages
      • 3 hours of reading

      A lyrical and dramatic collection of poems centered around Shetland from the winner of the T. S. Eliot Prize.

      The Stone Age
    • A brilliant new poetry collection from the winner of the T. S. Eliot Prize

      Byssus
    • A love letter to life on the remote British islands of Shetland and to a wilder way of living, from one of our most celebrated poets.

      Storm Pegs