Independent Publishers Group Logo

Sign up today...
for featured titles, special offers, bestsellers, and more, in your inbox!

Subscribe to receive special offers, monthly books suggestions, seasonal selections, and more!

Close
The Met Office Advises Caution
The Met Office Advises Caution

The Met Office Advises Caution

POETRY

72 Pages, 5.25 x 8.5

Formats: Trade Paper, Mobipocket, EPUB, PDF

Trade Paper, $14.99 (US $14.99) (CA $17.99)

Publication Date: September 2016

ISBN 9781784102722

Rights: US, CA, NZ, CAM, SAM, CAR, PH, KR & FM

Carcanet Press, Ltd. (Sep 2016)
Carcanet Press Ltd.

eBook

eBook Editions Available

Will it work on my eReader?
Price: $14.99
 
 

Overview

Shortlisted for The Seamus Heaney Centre for Poetry First Collection Prize 2017. Rebecca Watts's debut collection is a witty, warm-hearted guide to the English landscape, and a fresh take on nature poetry. In assured style, Watts positions herself where Wordsworth, Frost and Hughes have stood; with an original point of view and an openness to the possibilities of form, she retunes the genre for modern ears. From the wide-open plains of ecology and social history to the intimate enclosures of dreams, homes and bodies, these poems approach their often-unusual subjects with the clarity and matter-of-factness of Simon Armitage and with humour that recalls Stevie Smith, spinning memorable scenes and vivid images from the material of ordinary language. Animals, as familiars and omens, abound. Weather anticipates and directs human drama, under the analytic and tender watch of a poet influenced as much by science and realism as by Romanticism. As landscaper, orienteer and companion, Watts finds new ways of negotiating the complex territories of our physical and emotional worlds.

Author Biography

Rebecca Watts was born in Suffolk in 1983 and currently lives in Cambridge, where she works in a library. In 2014 she was one of the Poetry Trust's Aldeburgh Eight, and in 2015 a selection of her work was included in Carcanet's New Poetries VI anthology. The Met Office Advises Caution is her first book.