
Synopsis
A brilliant, moving book . . . Reminiscent of one of this centuryās great elegies, Denise Rileyās A Part Song, The M Pages is similarly probing, hurt, skeptical and smarting . . . in a book packed with good poems.' Irish Times
The reader might be justified in thinking that the āMā in the title of Colette Bryceās new collection could stand for āmortalityā, āmourningā, or the spontaneous and cathartic practice of the writerās āmorning pagesā ā until they reach the bookās arresting central sequence. Addressed to a named āMā who has suddenly died, this fourteen-part poem depicts the experience of unexpected bereavement, and the altering effect such events have on the living. It does so unflinchingly, gracefully and honestly, as Bryce harnesses her characteristic insight, forensic eye and tightly woven music to deeply moving ends ā while demonstrating again why she is regarded as one of the leading Irish poets of the age. As the book unfolds, it becomes clear that her other subjects ā of family, travel, history and ageing ā all orbit the gravitational centre of The M Pages. What emerges is an important book about love, fear, self-censorship and the limits of our knowledge, and what we can and cannot say about some of the most profound events we face.
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Reviews
A brilliant, moving book, whose efforts of affection are most affecting in the long title sequence remembering her sister . . . Reminiscent of one of this centuryās great elegies, Denise Rileyās A Part Song, The M Pages is similarly probing, hurt, skeptical and smarting. Bryce is a poet of great assurance . . . in a book packed with good poems.






















