Product Details
Marabou

Marabou
By Jane Yeh

List Price: £6.95
Price: £6.26 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery on orders over £5. Details

Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk

28 new or used available from £0.01

Average customer review:

Product Description

Marabou, Jane Yeh's first book of poems, is a meditation on the nature of artifice, and on the self. Her snapshots freeze fraught instants in the lives of a broad cast of characters: the horror movie mummy, an Elizabethan shoemaker, a flock of Cumbrian sheep; there's Harry Potter's owl and Oscar Wilde, two European princesses...In these beautifully crafted poems, her personae address the themes of love, lust, glamour and desperation with wit and flair. Hers is the language of fashion, espionage, revenge tragedy; her taut pressure-packed lines combine vivid detail and bold confession and reach unexpected emotional truths.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #255093 in Books
  • Published on: 2005-10-26
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 64 pages

Editorial Reviews

From the Author
Marabou has been shortlisted for the 2005 Whitbread Poetry Award, as well as for the 2005 Forward Prize for best first collection.

About the Author
Jane Yeh was born in the United States in 1971 and educated at Harvard University. She holds Master's degrees from the Iowa Writers' Workshop and Manchester Metropolitan University. Metre Editions published her chapbook, Teen Spies, in 2003. She is the recipient of a New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship and an Academy of American Poets Prize. Currently Writer in Residence at Kingston University, she contributes articles on books and sport to The Times Literary Supplement, Poetry Review, The Village Voice, and Time Out New York. She lives in London.


Customer Reviews

No plain Jane4
A vivid and remarkable mimic with lyrical skills to match, I highly rate Jane Yeh's first book of poems 'Marabou'.Split into three sections the poems have a unique ability to inhabit- infact 'become'- different characters and real people in history and time; as well as possesing a wonderful witty anthromorphism which includes an owl and a Cumbrian sheep!
What is striking in Yeh is her empathy with people and places that official history ignores.For example the opening poem "Correspondence" is about unrequited love and sets the tone for a beautiful encapsulation of human fraility .This is brilliantly done by using a variety of literary and artistic devices: tableaux's, friezes, Self portaits( Vermeer, Watteau) and film 'frames' poignantly reflect the temporaneous nature of our existence(s).She records the history of human consciousness, not just the big events.For instance reportage by someone on the moments before Mount Vesuvius erupts or imagining Mao Tse-Tung in Paris as a young man.All in all a superb debut.