Pretend You Don't Know Me: New and Selected Poems

Pretend You Don't Know Me: New and Selected Poems

by Finuala Dowling (Author), Finuala Dowling (Author), Finuala Dowling (Author)

Synopsis

Pretend You Don't Know Me brings together in one volume the best of Finuala Dowling's funny, poignant and idiosyncratic poetry from four earlier prize-winning collections, with a section devoted to new poems. It introduces this popular South African poet to a UK audience. Finuala Dowling's debut collection, I flying, published in 2002, was an instant success in her native South Africa. Its accessibility, humanity and wit, as well as its beguilingly honest stories of home, parenthood, love, loss and desperation, won many new converts to poetry. The volume went into multiple printings, and won the Ingrid Jonker prize. Dowling's subsequent collections, Doo-Wop Girls of the Universe and Notes from the Dementia Ward (winners of the SANLAM and Olive Schreiner prizes respectively), consolidated her reputation as an inventive sketcher of the domestic sublime. Her chapbook, Change is possible, sold out at the 2014 Aldeburgh Poetry Festival. Pretend You Don't Know Me contains her iconic poem `To the doctor who treated the raped baby and who felt such despair' as well as Dowling's tragi-comic cycle of poems on the theme of her mother's dementia, and the hugely popular poems `Butter', `I am the Zebra', `To adventurers, as far as I'm concerned' and `The abuse of cauliflowers'. At the heart of the book are the funny and poignant connections we make with other people, and the lifelong effort to stay whole.

$3.48

Quantity

1 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 136
Publisher: Bloodaxe Books Ltd
Published: 27 Sep 2018

ISBN 10: 1780374240
ISBN 13: 9781780374246
Book Overview: Finuala Dowling will be launching the book in October 2018 at festivals and venues in Newcastle, London, Sheffield, Manchester and others to be confirmed.

Media Reviews
`Dowling is redefining poetry, bringing her distinctive voice and wit to bear on a medium so often stuck in moody, broody times.' - Arja Slafranca, The Star; `Finuala Dowling is a brave new voice in South African poetry, filled with vitality, wit, unexpected rhythms and fresh ideas... Always accessible, Dowling's poetry is never shallow.' - Shirley Kossick, Mail&Guardian; `Here is a woman who does not apologise for being human... Her work is entertaining, but not compromising. It brings affection and attention to everyday emotions and experiences. They are love poems fused with passion and generosity.' - Don Maclennan
Author Bio
Finuala Dowling was born in Cape Town, South Africa in 1962, the seventh child in a family of eight. She started to write poetry only once she turned 40, but has since become one of her country's most popular poets and novelists (her fourth novel, The Fetch, won the 2016 Herman Charles Bosman prize and was described by reviewer Dineke Volschenk as a book that 'in years to come, will bear testimony to the maturity and intelligence of South African culture and literature'). Finuala divides her time between writing and her role as senior lecturer in the Centre for Extra-Mural Studies at the University of Cape Town, where she is part of a team that organises its annual Summer School. She lives in the seaside town of Muizenberg with her sister Cara. She has a daughter, Beatrice, who also writes poetry. Her first UK publication, Pretend You Don't Know Me: New and Selected Poems, will be launched by Bloodaxe with a series of readings in October 2018.