The Forward Book of Poetry showcases a selection of the best contemporary poetry published in the British Isles over the last year, including the winners of 2014's prestigious Forward Poetry Prizes. It is introduced by Jeremy Paxman, chairman of the 2014 Forward Prizes judges. Their final recommendations give a strong sense of the variety, vitality and wit present in poetry today, making this anthology - the 23rd in an annual series - valuable to both first-time poetry readers and those keen to find more new poetry to enjoy.
This special e-book edition of the anthology features exclusive interviews with all sixteen poets shortlisted for the prizes, including Hugo Williams, Louise Glück, John Burnside, and winners, Kei Miller and Liz Berry. The edition also includes an article on the judging process by Vahni Capildeo.
If you buy only one poetry book this year, make sure this is it.
Kei Miller was born in Jamaica in 1978. He completed an MA in Creative Writing at Manchester Metropolitan University and a PhD in English literature at the University of Glasgow. He works in multiple genres - poetry, fiction and non-fiction and has won major prizes across these genres. He won the Forward Prize for poetry and the OCM Bocas Prize for Caribbean Literature. He has taught at the Universities of Glasgow, London, and Exeter. He is presently Professor of English at the University of Miami.
Another fascinating collection of the best poetry from Britain and Ireland brought together for the Forward Prize. This is the tenth volume I’ve read and enjoyed. Jeremy Paxman who curated the collection as the ‘Common Reader’ and as someone “who comes to poetry to be delighted, comforted or alerted, to see the ordinary as extraordinary, the everyday as profound, to have the world reimagined, language revived.” has found just that in this collection. The poems will not all be appreciated by everyone; but if some stir the emotions, thoughtfulness and leave an impression, then Forward have achieved what they set out to do. There are a core of excellent pieces that I really enjoyed and among them my favourites are Colette Bryce’s DERRY; THE HORSE AND RIDER by Louise Glück “But to abandon you, said the other, would be to leave a part of myself behind, and how can I do that when I do not know which part you are?”; and Beatrice Garland for BEACH HOLIDAY and LADY AND FOX, which captures the essence of fox with such clarity. Great insight into the best poetry of that year and a way to spend a few relaxing hours appreciating what Jeremy describes as “The arresting phrase, the telling metaphor, the resonant rhyme…like a first kiss”.
My favourite poems in this collection were: Derry, by Colette Bryce, Among The Gods (Persephone), by Helen Tookey, and Hurricane by Mir Mahfuz Ali. They all evoke a strong mood and feel pleasing on the tongue when spoken aloud.
There were a fair few poems in this that I liked, but I didn't care for the majority of them.
This is one of the better Forward poetry books. There are some excellent poems (5 star) here which make the collection well worth buying.There are, to my mind, only one or two poor poems.