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Naming of the Bones

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The poems in Naming of the Bones touch on Christian values and work towards a significant faith, at the same time focusing on the wonders of an evolving cosmos. The poems delight in the things of the earth, suggesting a secular Christianity. They hope justice will overcome human greed and violence, while they assent to the seasons developing of our landscapes and the beauty and dangers of our place in creation. The sequence 'Like the Dewfall' works with the music of the French composer Olivier Messiaen and his double piano masterpiece, 'Visions de l'Amen', a suite of seven pieces for two pianos, composed in 1943 during the Nazi Occupation of Paris. Messiaen describes the music as seven reflections of the lives of those who accept their existence with gratitude, an acceptance the poem accept, passionate, lyrical and deeply engaged. Other poems connect the 'landscape, sea-scape and sky-scape' of the Achill of Deane's formative years to the 'wonders of the Christian faith' with a sacramental awareness that is a striking feature of many of the poems. Fiona Sampson wrote in the Financial Times, 'The poetry here is always beautiful, and always high stakes because infused with spirituality.' And the theologian Cyril O'Regan comments, 'if Deane is not a prophetic poet by most modern standards - that is, we have to strain to hear denunciation - nonetheless, precisely as a poet he understands himself to be a witness: Poetry tells the truth that we would not tell, lifts the veil on the human condition that we would prefer not to be lifted.'
John F. Deane was born on Achill Island, off the west coast of Ireland. He is the founder of Poetry Ireland – the National Poetry Society – and of The Poetry Ireland Review, in 1978. He is also founder and first editor of The Dedalus Press. His poetry has been translated into many languages and has won several Irish and International Prizes. He is the recipient of the O’Shaughnessy Award for Irish Poetry and the Marten Toonder Award for Literature. He is a member of Aosdána, the body established by the Arts Council of Ireland to honour artists ‘whose work has made an outstanding contribution to the arts in Ireland’. He has been shortlisted for the Irish Times Poetry Now Award and for the T.S. Eliot Prize.
* A wide-ranging and generous collection of new poems from one of Ireland’s best contemporary poets. * Touches on Christian values, at the same time delighting in the wonders of the earth. * Contains the widely praised sequence ‘Like the Dewfall’, originally published in a limited fine edition by Guillemot Press. * This sequence works with the double piano masterpiece ‘Visions de l’Amen’ of the French composer Olivier Messiaen, composed in 1943 during the Nazi Occupation of Paris.
'Master-sonneteer, the Teilhard de Chardin of Irish poetry, Achill chronicler and gazer at the heavens' - Thomas McCarthy, Poetry Ireland Review
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