Water Sessions
By (Author) James Lasdun
Vintage Publishing
Jonathan Cape Ltd
15th September 2012
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Modern and contemporary poetry (c 1900 onwards)
821.914
Paperback
64
Width 130mm, Height 198mm, Spine 7mm
95g
A powerful new collection - his first in 11 years - from one of our finest poets. James Lasdun's new book of poems, his first since his acclaimed collection Landscape with Chainsaw, applies his characteristic blend of the celebratory and the elegiac to a rich variety of new themes and old obsessions. At once personal and political, Water Sessions brilliantly registers the shock waves of global tumult in the most intimately domestic of settings, while at the same time constantly feeling its way outward through private experience into the larger arenas of social and civic drama. Fathers and sons, men and women, desire and repression, art and silence, form the book's central polarities. Recurrent motifs of water and gardens give its wide-ranging subjects a satisfying coherence while also supplying its sometimes darkly urgent poems with a note of intense lyrical beauty. Much praised for the wit and tensile strength of his line, Lasdun moves in this volume from the tight formality of 'Stones' through the highly original patient/therapist dialogue form of the title poem, to the exuberant free verse of 'Dog Days', with a versatility and intelligence that ensure his standing as one of the most gifted poets writing today.
The title sequence both sends up and celebrates the talking cure -- Mark Sanderson * Sunday Telegraph *
Water Sessions is a collection of fine psychological acuity and astringent beauty -- Adam Newey * Guardian *
Sharp, slicing imagery gives Lasdun's poetry its deep notch of truth * New York Times *
[D]eeply literary, but cool as well... Urbane excursions in pastoral, these verses will ensure there are laurels on Lasdun's brow for many years to come -- Giles Foden * Guardian *
It Isnt Me will doubtless illicit a pang of recognition from many readers; Blues for Samson, a candid but measured take on the capricious male libido, also deserves mention. In their reflective patter, formal dexterity, serio-comic tones and depth of feeling, these are the stand-out poems in an excellent book. -- Ben Wilkinson * TLS *
James Lasdun's books include The Horned Man and Give Me Everything You Have: On Being Stalked. He teaches creative writing at Columbia University and reviews regularly for the Guardian. His work has been filmed by Bernardo Bertolucci (Besieged) and he co-wrote the films Sunday, which won Best Feature and Best Screenplay awards at Sundance, and Signs and Wonders, starring Charlotte Rampling and Stellan Skarsgard.