Ghosts

Ghosts

by JohnFuller (Author)

Synopsis

Like the possible phantoms that stalk the dark passageways of its title poem, John Fuller's beautifully lucid collection explores the grey area between life and death. Full of self-deprecating wit and subtle insight, the poems contemplate the inevitability that, when one reaches a certain age, the moment of one's own passing will start to haunt one. In 'Flea Market' there is the pathos of once-loved objects laid out, meaningless, 'on the cobbles for scavengers'. In 'Positions in the Bed', the restless search for a comfortable way to sleep leads to thoughts of the morning when 'we find/ Ourselves absconded from the body's/ Weary roll-call'. And yet, out of this sense of mortality, grows a determination to take delight in the moment, to appreciate fully 'the business of living'. These poems are not only intimate, domestic and often funny, they are uncompromising in the way they confront the huge and unanswerable questions of life. The movement of thought is rendered beautifully concrete in the intricate music of their langauge, and melancholy co-exists with a lightness of touch that builds a moving and humane barricade against 'life's brevity/ And it's insignificance'. Shortlisted for the Whitbread Award for Poetry.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 80
Publisher: Chatto & Windus
Published: 16 Sep 2004

ISBN 10: 0701177403
ISBN 13: 9780701177409
Book Overview: Warm, humane, beautifully lucid poems on death, birth and the need to seize the day by one of Britain's most important poets. Shortlisted for the Whitbread Award for Poetry.

Media Reviews
I have much admired and enjoyed John Fuller's collection of poems Ghosts. He contemplates age and death with a kind of glee and surprised intelligence that I find very sympathetic -- A.S. Byatt * New Statesman *
Elegant, surprising meditations on approaching death - the persistence of past people and things, and the liveliness of infants * Guardian *
Fuller is a wonderfully skilled craftsman and the grace and elegance of his style is at the service of not only a sharp wit and intelligence, but a great depth of feeling * Sunday Telegraph *
Fuller's poetry can be seen to build a bridge of boats between light verse and solemn energy with the best technique of anyone writing in Britain now -- Peter Porter
Author Bio
John Fuller is an acclaimed poet and novelist. He has written eighteen collections of poetry, including Pebble & I and Song & Dance, both chosen as Poetry Book Society Recommendations; and The Space of Joy (2006), which was shortlisted for the Costa Poetry Award. Most recently, he has written Who Is Ozymandias?, a book on puzzles in poetry. He is an Emeritus Fellow of Magdalen College, Oxford.