
Synopsis
Lorraine Marinerās slant humour and eye for the peculiarities of human interactions have won her comparisons to Stevie Smith, that distinctly English poetic sensibility. In Little Anchors, her third collection, Mariner looks below the surface of the āquintessential English familyā, discovering hidden heritages and family secrets and a new understanding of what it means to belong.
She uncovers the Greek heritage that her late father had carefully concealed ā like many migrants of his generation ā reclaiming both his name and extended family as she travels to get to know them. Alongside is the story of a beloved Irish grandmother, whose institutional and migrant experiences intersect with the troubling āherstoriesā of twentieth-century Irish culture.
A transatlantic love affair brings a new rhyme with her familyās migrations to the US, while London works its magic and draws these strands of identity together again. George Michael, āItās a Wonderful Lifeā, Jane Eyre and the longueurs of lockdown also make appearances.
Lorraine Marinerās absorbing new collection is about the little anchors that hold us to people and places and keep us from going adrift.




















