Paul Celan's Collected Prose reissued as a Carcanet Classic.
Skoulding's second Carcanet collection develops the author's contribution to ecopoetics, inventing new forms to think through relationships with the more-than-human world.... Læs mere
A Selected Poems introducing this award-winning Taiwanese poet in English for the first time. Chen's ardent vision spans our world, ancient and present, resonant to the core, blending Eastern and Western sensibilities in a brilliant tapestry.
Thomas Kinsella is one of the distinguished modern poets. His work over fifty years has challenged the poetic landscape. It employs myth and modernism in explorations that... Læs mere
Debris collects poems from Daniel Huws' first two books, Noth (Secker, 1972) and The Quarry (Faber, 1999), alongside a substantial selection of new poems and translations.
This new selection of work (the first in over three decades) includes previously unpublished material and reveals the beguiling style and technical ingenuity of one of American poetry’s best-kept secrets.
Poems and translations from two decades of writing, exploring in restless, evolving forms, the experiment of being alive in a changing and turbulent world.
Award-winning poet Matthew Welton's new collection continues his career-long playful, exploratory poetics as he tackles nature writing, drawing from a year's walking in a city's green spaces.
A new selection of work by Austin Clarke, one of the most significant poets of twentieth century Ireland, edited by the Irish poet John McAuliffe.
Bestselling author Sophie Hannah’s new collection combines maverick, irreverent poems that rhyme and scan and will make you laugh aloud, together with the librettos of her two musicals whose rebellious protagonist is every bit as mischievous and independent-minded as his creator.
Jorie Graham's new collection seeks to guide us through the ecological, political and technological conditions that threaten our modern world.
The first Communist memoir from Northern Ireland, set against a backdrop of the vanished culture of Belfast Communism, from the winner of the T.S. Eliot and Forward Prizes.