Synopses & Reviews
From one of England's most established poets comes a new collection of poems filled with scabrous wit and lyric assurance that are just as sharp as his five previous award-winning collections. Most recently, OBriens Down River won the 2001 Forward Prize for Best Collection, making him the only poet to have won the Forward Prize twice.
Synopsis
Many of the poems in Sean O'Brien's new collection take their emotional tenor and imaginative cue from his acclaimed translation of Dante's Inferno, and occupy a dark, flooded, subterranean world, as dramatically compelling as it is disquieting. Circumstances have compelled O'Brien to return repeatedly to the elegiac form, and The Drowned Book contains a number of powerfully moving poems written in memory of fellow poets and artists. The Drowned Book again shows O'Brien a master of the authoritative line, and underscores his pre-eminence among contemporary English poets.
Praise for Sean O'Brien's verse translation of Dante's Inferno:
'Compelling, with a steady incandescence to the language' Independent
'All life is written in Dante's burning pages, and Sean O'Brien is to be congratulated on his expert rehabilitation of a classic' Spectator
'Combines urgent readability with a muscular forcefulness' The Economist
About the Author
Sean OBrien is a poet, critic, playwright, broadcaster, anthologist, editor, and the only poet to have won the prestigious Forward Prize twice. He is the author of Cousin Coat, Down River, and a translator of Dante's Inferno.