Results for: T.S. Eliot Prize
God's Gift to Women: Don Paterson
After the huge success of Nil Nil (a Poetry Book Society Choice and winner of the Forward Prize best first collection), Don Paterson's second collection was impatiently awaited. His readers ... More
Birthday Letters: Ted Hughes
Ted Hughes's Birthday Letters are addressed, with just two exceptions, to Sylvia Plath, the American poet to whom he was married. They were written over a period of more than ... More
Billy's Rain: Hugo Williams
The fifty poems in Billy's Rain chart the course of a love affair, now ended. Its complications, obsessions, evasions, secret joys and emotional pitfalls are explored with all the subtlety ... More
Dart: Alice Oswald
A wonderfully evocative poetic census that forms a narrative of the river Dart. More
Landing Light: Don Paterson
Landing Light is Don Paterson's most accomplished and spiritual collection to date. In these poems, he guides us down the labyrinths of our deepest and most private concerns, pursuing the ... More
The Lost Leader: Mick Imlah
Winner of the 2008 Forward Prize for Best Collection, The Lost Leader is the much-praised collection by the late Mick Imlah. More
Weeds and Wild Flowers: Alice Oswald, illustrated by Jessica Greenman
A gorgeously presented new collection from T. S. Eliot prize-winning poet Alice Oswald, illustrated throughout with etchings by artist Jessica Greenman. More
Night: David Harsent
David Harsent's most recent collection was shortlisted for the Forward Prize for Best Collection, and is in contention for the T. S. Eliot Prize. He talks in-depth about the poems in this Faber Podcast. More
Farmers Cross: Bernard O'Donoghue
The fifth collection of poems from Bernard O'Donoghue, winner of the Whitbread Prize for Poetry. The book brings together subtle and moving meditations on exile and belonging, travel and home, ... More
Tippoo Sultan's Incredible White-Man-Eating Tiger Toy-Machine!!!: Daljit Nagra
Shortlisted for the T. S. Eliot Prize, Daljit Nagra's second collection is a firecracker, full of the colour, verve and linguistic magic that typified his Forward Prize-winning debut, Look We Have Coming to Dover! More