
Synopsis
November is Sean OāBrienās first collection since his widely celebrated The Drowned Book, the only book of poetry to have won both the Forward and T. S. Eliot prizes. November is haunted by the missing, the missed, the vanished, the uncounted, and the uncountable lost: lost sleep, connections, muses, books, the ghosts and gardens of childhood. Ultimately, these lead the poet to contemplate the most troubling absences: OāBrienās elegies for his parents and friends form the heart of this book, and are the source of its pervasive note of dĆ©part. Elsewhere ā as if a French window stood open to an English room ā the islands, canals, railway stations and undergrounds of OāBrienās landscape are swept by a strikingly Gallic air. This new note lends OāBrienās recent poems a reinvigorated sense of the imaginative possible: November shows OāBrien at the height of his powers, with his intellect and imagination as gratifyingly restless as ever.
Details
Imprint: Picador




























