Launch reading by Penelope Shuttle, A.B. Jackson and John Challis
Date and time
Location
Online event
Join Bloodaxe Books for this launch reading by Penelope Shuttle, A.B. Jackson and John Challis for their new poetry collections.
About this event
Join Bloodaxe Books for this launch reading by Penelope Shuttle, A.B. Jackson and John Challis celebrating the publication of their new poetry collections.
Hosted by editor Neil Astley, this free Bloodaxe launch event will be streamed on YouTube Live on this YouTube page: https://youtu.be/A9xnFE65BAg
If you register to attend on Eventbrite will receive an event link reminder by email by midday the day before the event. The Eventbrite ticket will not give you the event link: for the event link see this page (above) or the Eventbrite page. For those who can't make it live, the reading will be available on YouTube afterwards. If you miss the registration deadline, you can still watch live via the Bloodaxe YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A9xnFE65BAg
To order copies of the poets’ books direct from Bloodaxe, please click on these links (available via the Bloodaxe website from early June):
Penelope Shuttle: Lyonesse
https://www.bloodaxebooks.com/ecs/product/lyonesse-1258
A.B. Jackson: The Voyage of St Brendan
https://www.bloodaxebooks.com/ecs/product/the-voyage-of-st-brendan-1263
John Challis: The Resurrectionists
https://www.bloodaxebooks.com/ecs/product/the-resurrectionists-1260
Also available from Bloodaxe Books:
Penelope Shuttle: Unsent: New & Selected Poems 1980-2012 (2012)
https://www.bloodaxebooks.com/ecs/product/unsent-1045
Penelope Shuttle: Will You Walk a Little Faster? (2017)
https://www.bloodaxebooks.com/ecs/product/will-you-walk-a-little-faster--1143
A.B. Jackson: The Wilderness Party (2015)
https://www.bloodaxebooks.com/ecs/product/the-wilderness-party-290
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Penelope Shuttle: Lyonesse
The submerged land of Lyonesse was once part of Cornwall, according to myth and the oral tradition, standing for a lost paradise in Arthurian legend, but now an emblem of human frailty in the face of climate change. And there was indeed a Bronze Age inundation event which swept the entire west of Cornwall under the sea, with only the Isles of Scilly and St Michael’s Mount left as remnants above sea-level. Lyonesse was also Thomas Hardy’s name for Cornwall where Penelope Shuttle has lived all her adult life, always fascinated by the stories and symbolic presence of Lyonesse.
After seeing the Isles of Scilly from a small plane at a low altitude – flying over the Wolf Lighthouse – and then visiting the recent Sunken Cities exhibition at the British Museum, imagination and memory played their part in joining the Lyonesse dots together for her, prompting what she calls ‘a spontaneous inundation of approaches to the theme, images, soundings of Lyonesse’.
The second part of this book – New Lamps for Old – is a collection of poems she needed to write in coming up for air from the watery depths of Lyonesse, to find ways to begin again, to find meaning in life after bereavement. The ‘old lamps’ of a former life have been extinguished, leaving darkness. Her challenge was to find ‘new lamps’ to illuminate and give meaning to life. Lyonesse is a fluid magical world. The poems of New Lamps for Old are concerned with earth, air and fire. Both collections share allegiance with the fifth element, the spirit.
Penelope Shuttle has lived in Cornwall since 1970, and is the widow of the poet Peter Redgrove. Her retrospective, Unsent: New & Selected Poems 1980-2012, drew on ten collections published over three decades. This was followed by Will you walk a little faster? (2017). She has also published five novels, and is co-author with Peter Redgrove of two prose works, The Wise Wound and Alchemy for Women. She lives in Falmouth.
A.B. Jackson: The Voyage of St Brendan
In The Voyage of St Brendan, A.B. Jackson tells the tale of the legendary seafaring Irish abbot. After burning a book of fantastical stories, Brendan is compelled to sail the ocean with a crew of six monks in a leather-skinned currach; his task, to prove the existence of wonders in the world and create a new book of marvels. Discoveries include Jasconius the island-whale, a troop of Arctic ghosts, a hellmouth of tortured souls, a rock-bound Judas, and the magical castle of the boar-headed Walserands.
Although the roots of this legend lie in early Irish immrama and the Latin Navigatio Sancti Brendani Abbatis of the ninth century, Jackson has taken the fourteenth-century Middle Dutch version of Brendan’s voyage as the template for this engaging and spirited interpretation, making it recommended reading for scholars of medieval literature and lovers of fantasy adventure alike. The book includes a series of black and white linocuts by the American artist Kathleen Neeley.
A.B. Jackson was born in Glasgow in 1965. His first book, Fire Stations (Anvil), won the Forward Prize for Best First Collection in 2003. His second collection, The Wilderness Party (Bloodaxe Books, 2015), was a Poetry Book Society Recommendation. The Voyage of St Brendan is his third collection. He currently lives in Leeds.
John Challis: The Resurrectionists
The living and the dead are working side by side in John Challis’s dramatic debut collection, The Resurrectionists. Whether in London’s veg and meat markets, far below the Dartford Crossing, or on the edge of the Western world, these poems journey into a buried and sometimes violent landscape to locate the traces of ourselves that remain. Amidst the political disquiet rising from the groundwater, or the unearthing of the class divide at the gravesides of plague victims, the veil between the living and the dead is at its thinnest when a child is born, and something close to hope for the future is resurrected.
‘In John Challis’s superb first collection, the past has not finished with us. It pursues and provokes and questions what we’re about. Entire vanished or vanishing worlds of work – on the East End docks, at Smithfield, in the pre-Murdoch print, at the wheel of a black cab – reveal vivid traffic between the living and the dead.’ – Sean O’Brien
‘These poems throw a great arc of light out of the city’s storeyed past into the present, place, trades, family, vulnerable fatherhood. Here, balanced at the very edge, where “light will fall out of our language”, John Challis shines his words into the workings of the heart and of nature, with all their unpredictable transformations.’ – Imtiaz Dharker
John Challis was born in London in 1984. He won a Northern Writers’ Award in 2012. He was a poet-in-residence with the Northern Poetry Library in 2015 and was chosen as one of the Poetry Trust’s Aldeburgh Eight. His pamphlet, The Black Cab (Poetry Salzburg, 2017), was a 2019 New Writing North Read Regional title. He works at Newcastle University as a Research Associate, and lives in Whitley Bay.