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Sea Scale: New and Selected Poems

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Sea Scale: New and Selected Poems

Contributors:

By (Author) Brook Emery

ISBN:

9781922571090

Publisher:

Puncher and Wattmann

Imprint:

Puncher and Wattmann

Publication Date:

1st June 2022

Country:

Australia

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Main Subject:

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

308

Dimensions:

Width 148mm, Height 210mm

Description

Sea Scale comprises thirty new poems and a generous selection from Brook Emerys previous five volumes. From and dug my fingers in the sand, his first book, to Have Been and Are, his most recent, reviewers have noted the fluency and tactility of his writing and the range of his thinking and allusions. His poetry is speculative, always wondering, occasionally playful, always trying to make sense of the complexities of the material, spiritual and rational worlds. The inter-weavings of mind and brain, language and culture, nature and society, time and memory are all swept up in this enquiry. His particular skill is to render abstract and intellectual issues in sensuous and physical imagery. Ever-present is the sea which, while sometimes performing metaphoric or symbolic functions, is always its material self: the glittering humpbacked sea, the thousand flickering things the mind lights on and tries to hold.

His poems have a polished elegance that combines love of nature and wonder at the artistic impulse that keeps us alive to the potential to behave in a civilised manner towards each other. He is a first-class craftsman whose rhythms, like the flow of his language, seems effortless. Judges comments, Kenneth Slessor Poetry Prize

Brook Emerys new collection, Have Been and Are, continues in the vein of what might be called the philosophical-demotic established in recent volumes such as Uncommon Light and Collusion. I dont think anyone in the cohort of contemporary Australian poetry does this quite as well as he does. Martin Duwell, Cordite Poetry Review

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