ISBN: PB: 9781800173927

Carcanet

March 2024

80 pp.

21,6x13,8 cm

PB:
12.99 GBP
QTY:

Categories:

Silence

A Poetry Book Society Spring Recommendation 2024
Queen's Gold Medal 2011


The days have no names.
The day they count the dead,
the day they closed the doors,
turned off the lights.

We're still here in the silence,
hearing tree-talk,
the wind's secrets,
the company of birds.

("The Year of the Dead")

The poems in Gillian Clarke's "The Silence" begin during lockdown, to whose silences Clarke listens so attentively that other voices emerge. As the book progresses, that silence deepens, in the poems about her mother and childhood, about the Great War and its aftermaths, and in her continuing attention to Welsh places and names, and the rituals which make that world come in to focus. In these scrupulous, musical poems, Clarke finds consolation in how silence makes room for memory and for the company of the animal- and bird-life which surrounds us. These poems, compulsively returning to key images and formative moments, echo and bring back other ways of living to the book's present moment.

About the author

Born in Cardiff, Gillian Clarke is a poet, playwright, editor, broadcaster, lecturer and translator (from Welsh). She edited the Anglo-Welsh Review from 1975 to 1984, and has taught creative writing in primary and secondary schools and at university level. She is president of Ty Newydd, the writers' centre in North Wales which she co-founded in 1990. Since 1994 she has been a tutor in Creative Writing at the University of Glamorgan. Clarke was the inaugural Capital Poet for Cardiff 2005-6. Her poetry is studied by GCSE and A Level students throughout Britain. She has given poetry readings and lectures in Europe and the United States, and her work has been translated into ten languages. She has a daughter and two sons, and now lives with her architect husband on a smallholding in Ceredigion, Wales, where they raise a small flock of sheep, and care for the land according to organic and conservation practice. Gillian Clarke was appointed National Poet of Wales in 2008 until 2016.