These Silent Mansions: A life in graveyards
By (Author) Jean Sprackland
Vintage Publishing
Vintage
6th April 2021
4th February 2021
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Museology and heritage studies
Sociology: death and dying
Human geography
Worship, rites, ceremonies and rituals
306.9
Paperback
240
Width 128mm, Height 197mm, Spine 15mm
193g
An intimate exploration of our abiding fascination with cemeteries and graveyards, from critically acclaimed poet Jean Sprackland 'A refreshingly original meditation... I wish I had written it myself' Literary Review Graveyards are oases- places of escape, peace and reflection. Liminal sites of commemoration, where the past is close enough to touch. Yet they also reflect their living community - how in our restless, accelerated modern world, we are losing our sense of connection to the dead. Jean Sprackland - the prize-winning poet and author of Strands - travels back through her life, revisiting her once local graveyards. In seeking out the stories of those who lived and died there, remembered and forgotten, she unearths what has been lost.
A wide-ranging, unpredictable and refreshingly original meditation on a huge but widely ignored subject: the relationship between the living and the dead Exhilarating This is a lovely book: beautifully written, never lapsing into self-conscious poets prose, always a joy to read. I wish I had written it myself. -- Nigel Andrew * Literary Review *
Cemetery tales, filled with fascinating details and told with a poets skill Delightfully morbid Sprackland roves about history, language, biology, architecture, entomology, iconography and much else in her quest for meaning [and] the astonishing twistshould justify your reading These Silent Mansions in its entirety. -- Anthony Quinn * Guardian *
Shot through with delightful digressions There is a spare beauty to Spracklands prose These Silent Mansions is a strange and mercurial book; hard to pin down, but even harder to forget. -- Lucy Scholes * i *
Sprackland has the poets knack for atmosphere and a magicians ability to conjure up other worlds. She is like a ghostly time traveller Sprackland is particularly agile, though, at exploring the ways in which a graveyard reflects its community and how, with modern life, we are losing this sense of connection. -- Ann Treneman * The Times *
Part social history, part personal meditation and wholly enchanting - as attentive to local and moving details as it is to the fact of mortality itself. -- Andrew Motion
Jean Sprackland's first book of non-fiction, Strands- A Year of Discoveries on the Beach, won the 2012 Portico Prize. She is the author of five poetry collections, including Tilt, which won the 2007 Costa Poetry Award and, most recently, Green Noise (2018). She lives in London.