The Invisible Mender

The Invisible Mender

by SarahMaguire (Author)

Synopsis

Lucid, complex, sensual and richly textured, the poems in The Invisible Mender are notable for the breadth of their subject matter and the precision of their detail. We travel on journeys through landscapes dense with historical and political meanings, from the post-industrial decline of frozen North America to the stymied fecundity of a London garden paralysed in a heatwave: each emotional and physical climate explored and illuminated by the writer's astonishing images and searching intelligence. This is the work of unusual power and frankness, unflinching in its steady examination of grief and love, as in the heartbreaking title poem about the poet's loss of her first mother. But here, and in the magnificent long poem 'The Hearing Cure' this explicit engagement with what is difficult also reveals the redemptive, healing force of language. Sarah Maguire's outstanding first collection of poems, Spilt Milk, was published to considerable critical acclaim and led to her being chosen as one of the New Generation Poets. The Invisible Mender, her eagerly awaited second volume, will confirm her reputation as one of the most exciting young poets in Britain.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 80
Publisher: Jonathan Cape
Published: 29 May 1997

ISBN 10: 0224044230
ISBN 13: 9780224044233
Book Overview: The eagarly awaited second collection by one of the finest young woman poets in Britain.

Media Reviews
There is wit and lyricism, precision and suggestiveness. Observant of local detail... Sarah Maguire's poems attend to wider issues...without losing their primary sense of physical presence. TLS She rarely puts a foot wrong. -- Carol Ann Duffy
Author Bio
Born in 1957, Sarah Maguire has published three collections of poetry, Spilt Milk, The Invisible Mender and The Florist's at Midnight, as well as the anthology Flora Poetica: The Chatto Book of Botanical Verse. Her fourth collection, The Pomegranates of Kandahar, will be published in June 2007. She is the founder and director of the Poetry Translation Centre at SOAS, and she has lived all her life in west London.