This second collection from the 2022 OCM Bocas Poetry Prize winner re-imagines Shakespeare’s Othello for the modern age, intertwining the identities of 'immigrant' and 'Black'.
Letford's long-awaited third book is a tour de force of storytelling and poetry that has the narrative punch of a novel, taking us to the not-too-distant-future, where an artificial intelligence rules the world and a working-class family use their wits to live off the land.
Fred D'Aguiar's new collection connects the condition of namelessness of a famous black jockey with a present-day need to give back to those lost souls the dignity of their names.
During the latter phases of covid, Isobel Williams completed the challenge of completing her celebrated translations of Catullus. It joins Carcanet's celebrated Classics series, and like its incomplete predecessor it is illustrated with bondage drawings by the translator herself.
Ventriloquise is a provocative, assured collection of voices and visions from the award-winning author of Unearthly Toys and B (After Dante).
In poems and translations, The Grid tells a highly unusual set of stories about the end of the world, ancient and modern.
With the world turned upside down following the sudden death of a same sex partner, the poet works through the aftermath, negotiating the people and 'stuff' left behind, and transforming... Læs mere
This first collection by New Poetries poet and Telegraph poetry editor is at once brilliantly witty in language and formal ambition, and wryly dark in its themes.
John Masefield's Sea-Fever: Selected Poems reissued as a Carcanet Classic.
Hell, I love everybody: 52 Poems by James Tate re-introduces the poet, providing a poem for every week of the year, every mood and season.
A 'Selected and New Poems' from one of Ireland's most important religious poets of recent times.
In Child Ballad, David Wheatley's sixth collection, he explores a world transformed by the experience of parenthood.