Life Saving: Why We Need Poetry - Introductions to Great Poets
By (Author) Josephine Hart
Little, Brown Book Group
Virago Press Ltd
30th October 2012
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
809.1
Hardback
368
Width 200mm, Height 137mm, Spine 32mm
524g
Josephine Hart, author of the bestselling novel DAMAGE, had what she called 'a long love affair' with poetry. It was an affair that started as a child growing up in Ireland 'where life was language before it was anything else' and lasted until her untimely death at the age of sixty-nine in 2011. As a teenager, she found the poetry of Eliot, Larkin, Yeats and others a lifeline,'a route map through life'.
In the late 1980s, Hart, by now a successful West End theatre producer, began a hugely popular event in which actors read the words of the great poets to an enraptured audience. In 2004, The Josephine Hart Poetry Hour moved to the British Library, where it remains today. By her own admission, Josephine Hart gave 'dead poets society' . But she also gave them intelligent and exciting introductions; all of which are now collected here in this volume. They are insightful, even great, works in their own right.LIFE SAVING: WHY POETRY MATTERS leaves us an inspiring legacy. It takes us on a journey of the imagination to some of the greatest poems written in the English language and allows us to understand, intuitively and deeply, why poetry matters. With an Afterword by Josephine Hart's husband, Lord Saatchi.Josephine Hart (1942-2011) was the bestselling author of DAMAGE, SIN, OBLIVION and THE RECONSTRUCTIONIST. She was a Director of Haymarket Publishing and founded Gallery Poets before going on to produce a number of West End plays. As well writing novels, she was a 'poetry evangelist' and her Josephine Hart Poetry Hour at the British Library inspired two edited poetry books: CATCHING LIFE BY THE THROAT and WORDS THAT BURN. She was married to Maurice Saatchi and had two sons.