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Hiddensee

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Hiddensee

Contributors:

By (Author) Annie Freud

ISBN:

9781529037685

Publisher:

Pan Macmillan

Imprint:

Picador

Publication Date:

27th April 2021

UK Publication Date:

7th January 2021

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Poetry by individual poets
Narrative theme: Sense of place

Dewey:

821.92

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

144

Weight:

220g

Description

Hiddensee represents Annie Freud's most ambitious work to date, not least because it is a book about ambition and its necessity, the need to go beyond oneself, and to do what one cannot: Freud dives into other ways of thinking, other art forms, the taboos of illness and desire, and - spectacularly - other languages. This ambition has also emboldened Freud to pursue and confront the complex truth of herself: her German Jewish inheritance, her teachers, the remarkable minds of the exiled individuals who raised her - and the exiles she herself then pursued. The book also celebrates the work of the French-language Swiss poet Jacques Tornay, whom Freud identifies as a spiritual brother - and a route back into her own French and symbolist influences. These astonishing and generous versions of Tornay remind us that our voices should not and cannot be uncomplicatedly our own. Hiddensee is named for the Baltic island where Annie Freud's grandmother spent her summers before the war (and its famous artistic community, whose members included George Grosz and Kthe Kollwitz). In its unselfconscious internationalism and breathtaking cultural range, Hiddensee offers a radically European and multilingual perspective to counter the cultural narrowness and closing borders of the current age, and again confirms Freud as one of our most essential poets.

Reviews

Often witty and light-hearted, sometimes worried and sad, Freuds poems are highly evocative of the complicated life she has led. * Guardian *
Modest, gentle and universal, these understated poems are a small masterclass in the art of synthesis * Guardian *

Author Bio

Annie Freud studied English and European Literature at the University of Warwick. Her first collection, The Best Man That Ever Was, received the Glen Dimplex New Writers Award. Her second collection, The Mirabelles, was shortlisted for the T. S. Eliot Prize. She is a tutor in poetry writing and lives in Dorset with her husband.

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