Violeta Parra: Life and Work
Book
The Chilean artist Violeta Parra (1917 - 1967) is a cultural icon in Latin America. Parra is best...
The Anchor's Long Chain
Book
Widely considered the foremost French poet of his generation, Yves Bonnefoy has wowed the literary...
Passionfood: 100 Love Poems
Book
Passionfood is a feast of classic and contemporary love poems. There are a hundred flavours in this...
ClareR (5726 KP) rated Mrs Death Misses Death in Books
Feb 15, 2021
“For surely only she who bears it, she who gave you life, can be she who has the power to take it.”
Seems logical to me.
“And there is no human more invisible, more easily talked over, ignored, betrayed and easy to walk past than a woman; than a poor old black woman.”
The thought of walking past death on a daily basis and not realising that’s who you’re passing, is rather a disconcerting thought!
I liked the playful language, starting with the title and moving on through prose mixed with poetry, and parts were written in script form too. This wasn’t reading for the lazy: it kept me on my toes. The historical deaths seen from Death’s point of view were fascinating too.
I did find myself wishing that Mrs Death had found herself another ghost writer, because Wolf Willeford is clearly a vulnerable person with mental health issues - I did wonder if it was written to illustrate a form of psychosis.
Either way, I loved it and read it FAR too quickly. If this is Salena Godden’s first foray into prose, I will be looking out for what she writes next - and looking out for some of her poetry too, when I can get back in to a library!
Many thanks to the publisher for providing me with an e-copy of this book through NetGalley.
She Walks In Beauty by Marianne Faithfull
Album
Marianne Faithfull's new unique album - full of poetry and music. Set by Warren Ellis, starring Nick...
Autumn (3 KP) rated The Time Traveler's Wife in Books
Jan 18, 2018
unlike some other books where the author spouts off obscure literature and poetry and uses unrealistic prose this was very believable. their conversations, their actions, their passions. clare and henry felt like old friends. really amazing.
there was one tiny thing that bothered me though. it was niffenegger's religious comments. they weren't realistic. maybe to someone who grew up in the 60s but not in a post-feminist world. some didn't even make sense.
Lumos (380 KP) rated Progress: Evolution of Technology in Tabletop Games
Mar 21, 2018
Dean Dwelly of Liverpool: Liturgical Genius
Book
This unique new book records and celebrates the extraordinary wisdom and genius of Frederick William...
A History of Irish Working-Class Writing
Book
A History of Irish Working-Class Writing provides a wide-ranging and authoritative chronicle of the...
Morning Short
Podcast
Enjoy a new, curated short story every episode. We hand-pick 15-25 minute short stories from a pool...