Thicket

Paperback

Main Details

Title Thicket
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Anna Jackson
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback
Pages:56
Category/GenrePoetry by individual poets
ISBN/Barcode 9781869404826
ClassificationsDewey:821.2
Audience
General

Publishing Details

Publisher Auckland University Press
Imprint Auckland University Press
Publication Date 1 July 2011
Publication Country New Zealand

Description

In Anna Jackson's fifth collection of poetry, a rich and leafy life is closing in on the poet. Scenarios from home and work join fairytale tropes and the interruptions of literature to make a pleasingly patterned whole. Anna Jackson has always been attracted to spending time 'in a dark wood' (notably in her 2000 collection, The Long Road to Teatime), and the new book finds her walking there again, revisiting and echoing earlier explorations, but also breaking fruitful new ground. Her shimmering, multi-faceted poems are preoccupied with thickets of language and other tangles; basements and subbasements; lenses, glass sheets and 'how to see'; and the relationship between 'I' and 'you'. And after the suburban house and its basement, the poet visits the realm of academia, the zoo, a pool hall, and then takes off for sites of folktale, story or dream. Though each poem is satisfying in itself, the links and conversations between them offer other threads into the collection. Thicket is a excellent book from a poet of unease, who constantly turns her attention to the brambled path, the track less followed, the subterranean presences in everyday life.

Author Biography

Poet Anna Jackson made her debut in AUP New Poets 1 and has since published four poetry collections with AUP: The Long Road to Teatime (2000), The Pastoral Kitchen (2001), Catullus for Children (2003) and The Gas Leak (2006). She lives in Wellington and teaches in the English Department at Victoria University of Wellington and is the author of Diary Poetics: Form and Style in Writers' Diaries 1915-1962 (2010) and, with Charles Ferrall, British Juvenile Fiction 1850-1950: The Age of Adolescence (2009).

Reviews

"A delight to read and a goldmine for any English classroom." --English in Aotearoa on Catullus for Children