Sleeping Keys
By (Author) Jean Sprackland
Vintage Publishing
Jonathan Cape Ltd
15th September 2013
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Modern and contemporary poetry (c 1900 onwards)
821.914
Paperback
64
Width 130mm, Height 198mm, Spine 6mm
87g
The new collection from the Costa prize-winning Jean Sprackland In her first collection since the Costa-winning Tilt, Jean Sprackland looks back at endings and beginnings- the end of a life, or of a marriage; old homes lived in and left, new homes discovered. There are poems that speak of the paralysis and bewilderment of knowing something is over, and of the strangely significant, almost votive nature of the things that are left behind- the biscuit tin 'of old keys, decommissioned and sleeping', the empty room fading 'to a tinnitus of dust and dead wasps'. This is a book of transitions - domestic and emotional - and it explores how the experience of change is painful, disorientating, even catastrophic, but also profoundly necessary and revelatory. Change brings with it the hope that love can be recovered out of the ruins; change, in fact, is a creative, healing force that shows us we have been living among ruins - that even in the face of grief and loss there are 'spectral futures / we must stride the ditch to reach'. Full of exact, vivid, clear-eyed observation of a world of failure and flux, Sleeping Keys also illuminates a future world beyond. For every object left emptied of significance, bereft, Jean Sprackland shows us another that is charged and radiant with possibility - the possibility of miracles.
Assured and tactful Sleeping Keys is a book distinguished by rueful but unembittered wisdom. -- Sean O'Brien * Guardian *
Full of poems that are unashamedly domestic. -- Suzi Feay * Independent on Sunday *
The poems in this collection are short, terse, painful reflections on ends and beginnings The later poems are ones of resilience, rebirth and hope. * Catholic Herald *
Apparently simple, down to earth poems with deep, unexpected, surprising images... Every line, each word are loaded with meaning. * Lancashire Life *
Poems scarred with the painful aftermath of a marital break-up and the wounded delight of new love. Anyone who has been through a divorce will recognise the language of these elegies. Spracklands tone sometimes reminds me of Poet Laureate Carol Ann Duffy. -- Bel Mooney * Daily Mail *
Jean Sprackland is the author of five previous poetry collections, including Tilt, which won the 2007 Costa Poetry Award. She has also published a book of non-fiction, Strands- A Year of Discoveries on the Beach, which won the 2012 Portico Prize. She lives in London.