Life Mask

Life Mask

by JackieKay (Author)

Synopsis

Jackie Kay's Life Mask is about love, loss, secrets and mistaken identity. These searching poems reveal the many ways people hide from each other and from themselves. They show how appearances are deceptive, and how many faces we make up in one face. Unpeeling the mask, she confronts her own past and her fears: meeting her father for the first time in Nigeria and ending a long-term relationship. Masks are about masquerade, camouflage, trickery, hypocrisy and stealth. They connect with running away, with how we conceal our feelings and hide from the truth. Jackie Kay's Life Mask poems penetrate the nature of love, showing how love is a kind of belief, and loss of love involves a loss of faith. But then they open out: coming clean, they blow their cover, drop the mask, give themselves away: the truth is often hooded or disguised, and honesty itself can be a kind of a mask. Life Mask isn't only concerned with love and loss but also with light and renewal, with honesty, assertion and being yourself, and with moving on to find a new sense of self-belief. 'Warm, tough, painful and often very funny poems'- fleur adcock, Sunday Times 'Witty, risky, lyrical, teasing; rich, strong, socially questioning' - ruth padel, Independent 'Brave and honest, full of pain and rage, but also a tenderness which is not sentimental, but deeply moving'- elizabeth bartlett, Poetry Review 'An outstanding young talent in British poetry and playwriting...a wonderfully spirited, tender and crafted contribution to Scottish writing, to black writing, and to the poetry of our time...a work of the utmost generosity and truth' - alastair niven, Poetry Review

$13.33

Quantity

1 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 64
Publisher: Bloodaxe Books Ltd
Published: 01 Apr 2005

ISBN 10: 185224691X
ISBN 13: 9781852246914

Author Bio
jackie kay is one of Britain's best-known poets, appearing frequently on radio and TV programmes on poetry and culture. Her three books of poetry from Bloodaxe, The Adoption Papers, Other Lovers and Off Colour, have sold thousands of copies, while her fiction - Trumpet and Why Don't You Stop Telling Stories? (both from Picador) - has been massively popular. She won the Somerset Maugham Award with Other Lovers, the Guardian Fiction Prize for Trumpet, and has twice won the Signal Poetry Award for her children's poetry. The Adoption Papers is a set text on numerous school and university courses. Born and raised in Scotland, she now lives in Manchester.