Ford's First World War masterpiece Parade's End is a panoramic exploration of time, history and love to rival the visions of Joyce and Proust. It follows English aristocrat Christopher... Læs mere
Oksana Maksymchuk's second collection constitutes a poetic study of the connection between war and eros. What forms does sex take during war? How do lovers and families endure and survive destruction? And how is ruination and renewal remembered and commemorated?
Anthony V. Capildeo's new book brings together a selection of their brilliant essays, letters and columns, many of them published in the leading poetry journal PN Review.
This selection of Middleton’s letters offers a new beginning point for readers of this dazzling, many-talented writer.
Jeffrey Wainwright's collection combines new poems with work drawn from his previous nine Carcanet books, providing a broad view of one of the finest living English poets.
A humorous, subversive sequel to 2023’s The Coming Thing, this narrative poem continues the story of Imelda ten years on within the walls of Pentonville Prison.
This new collection from award-winning Irish poet Leeanne Quinn presents a pan-European meditation on human geography and landscape.
This new collection from New Zealand's inaugural Poet Laureate and five-time winner of the New Zealand Book Award for Poetry explores the collisions between wonder and reality, hilarity and heartbreak.
T.S. Eliot Prize-shortlisted poet Joe Carrick-Varty’s outstanding second collection unflinchingly looks at inheritance, pain and memory.
The March-April 2026 issue of PN Review, one of the most outstanding poetry journals of our time.
The life’s work of one of the twentieth century’s most committed Jewish poets.
The debut Carcanet collection by a celebrated translator of Basho, who now turns his hand to composing original English-language haiku concerning the brutal murders that took place in an isolated mountain village in Japan not so long ago.