Firsthand: The New Anthology of Creative Writing from the University of East Anglia
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Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1168518 in Books
- Published on: 2001-10-02
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 386 pages
Editorial Reviews
Synopsis
This anthology demonstrates the quality of post-graduate writing at the University of East Anglia. Firsthand marks the thirty first year of the MA, now under the tutelage of the Poet Laureate, Andrew Motion. This year there are forty five contributors; followers of new fiction can enjoy a richly varied range of short stories, novel extracts, poetry and scripts. Well designed, attractively packaged, bound in high quality matt laminate, and printed on superior paper weight, Firsthand is a stylish volume that will have sustained appeal as its contributors come to achieve both national and international prominence. The anthology will carry reviews from among: A.L. Kennedy, Doris Lessing, Kazuo Ishiguro, Toni Morrison, Toby Litt, Tony Ramsay, John Madden, Trezza Azzopard and Michelle Roberts.
Customer Reviews
'a clarity of voice astounding in writers so young'
I picked this up solely because of the cover blurbs. Doris Lessing calls it 'talented, lively writing' and I figured she ought to know what she's talking about.
Ironically, though, it seemed to be the poets George Szirtes and Ruth Padel whose reviews really seemed to be on the money, at least with regard to the poets - Lessing I suspect must have dipped in and out of the prose at random and lucked out with some of her selections. Don't get me wrong the prose is good,and while I'd agree with previous reviewers about Stewart and Harris, it was Larissa Lai and Rebecca Fortey who really stuck out for me.
But my criticism would be while some of these writers are genuine inovators - Tim Jarvis comes to mind - some, like the Indian writer Neel Mukherjee, seem happy to dwell as pseudo-innovators whose prose control and style doesn't quite carry off their often intriguing conceits yet. But, one hopes, that will come with time. Novellists Siddons and Vandermerwe have a mature prose style that sees them write as though working on their fifth bestseller and it is, perhaps, inevitable therefore that some of the other writers suffer for their proximity to this level of writing.
It might also be because of the scale of the projects many of the prose writers seems to be involved with that some, though by no means all, fair badly when compared to the script writers and poets in this anthology. There is a clarity and precision in the scripts and poems, that sometimes eludes some of the prose writers: they seem flabby, or in need of paring down, by comparison. And this can in no way be solely because of their length. Paul Auster's novels, for example, have a richness BUT ALSO a control of language some of the prose writers might do well to look at. Alternatively they should look instead to their companion poet and playwrights.
The radio writer included here, Joy Taylor, spins a tightly contolled web of intrigue in just a view pages of dialogue and narration; yet we learn more in those pages than some professional novelists manage in a whole chapter. John Tully and Paul Farrell are both clearly screenwriters writing for that slightly 'off mainstream' audience that critics, award givers and cinema goers love. And they do it with style: I would not be surprised to see either name on the big screen in time.
The poets too, though to difering extents, exhibit a fine stylistic and linguistic control that for once does deserve the blurb you find on the cover: 'Not a word is wasted' says Ruth Padel, and this time I really do believe. True, Graham Clifford seems to want to resign himself to the antagonistic Lad-lit world of poetry; when he occasionally shows real sense of emotion and feeling he snaps out another adroit aboutface that leaves you reeling but also dissappointed. Clifford should listen to his inner voice more, take an example from his co-contributors in the volumne. Lal, for example, has a sense of the ephemeral and transient that enlightens your view of the world, whilst being neither childlike nor inconsequential. Ford, Toman and Herdman follow in the footsteps of the post-confessional poets who allow you in only so far before holding you at arms length making you see the world from where they want position you. A neat and hard trick well done here.The young poet Ian McHugh, by comparison, drags you into his arms - there is no innocent bystander in his poems: your presence as reader implicates you as much as his own presence as narrator.
This is a group of young poets and scripwriters who (and this, perhaps, IS partly because of the form they work in) dwell much more convincingly in the world than some of the characters of the prose pieces manage to do. I would not want to feel love and loss they way Thomas Warner can communicate them in his poems and yet I did. I would not want to walk through playground in the world of Kris Siefken without looking for concealed gunman, but I can here, safe in my armchair; I can sit on trains with poet Kristina Close and study the bald heads of departing men with the strange clinical mix of compassion and remove seen in cancer nurses and visit Lawrence's (an auspicious name) greengrocer's to hear him put the world to rights with a serious comedic note.
Where this volumne sings, whether in the scripts, prose or poetry, it does with a clarity of voice that is astounding in writers still at the beginnings of their career; perhaps I should excuse them then the occasional sharp (or flat) note.
At 15% thinner this volumne would have been a clear 5+. Yet even with my already expressed reservations I would have to give it a four and a half.
A gread read and full of names to watch.
Great new writing! A real find!
In a time when anthologies of new writing seem to be a dime-a-dozen this one was a real find!
Combining not just the usual collection of prose but also poetry and scripts as well I was really taken with the range AND the depth of talents here. I couldn't confess to have heard of any of the writers before I read this (although several have had previous novels/collections and more have forthcoming books) but I've started looking out on Amazon since then and have even picked up two 'previous' ones second-hand.
The short stories and extracts are great (especially Jamie Harris's capturing of rural American childhood in 'Buffalo Jones' and Neil Stewart's take on teenage love in 'Hotwire my Heart') but I really loved the poetry and scripts in this book! The scripts read as though you were watching a real film or seeing a play up close (check out the toy guillotine scene in Paul Farrel's 'Paraguay') and the poems, for their part, had me laughing, shocked and delighted in turn. I actually read one guy's poems (Tom Warner) only to realise afterwards I'd been reading formal sonnets and hadn't noticed.
From talking statues in the poems of Michelle Remblance to drive-by shootings (Kris Siefken) and a great take on bald men on a train (Kristina Close) these poets are right at the cutting edge. Oh and you've got to check what happen's when one guy's goldfish joins Friends of the Earth!
If you like new fiction, poetry or scripts I'd definitely recommend this one!
New writing from top new writers.
Offering examples of the work from each of the students of the 2000-2001 MA in Creative Writing at UEA, this book offers a wonderful diversity of authors' work, covering prose, poetry and even screenplays. The pieces are extremely varied, often highly amusing, frequently thought-provoking and generally literate and powerful. The past record of this course suggests we'll be seeing more of at least half a dozen of these writers. Some have already signed book deals, I understand, and others have signed with agents. My own favourites? The hilarious and perceptve 'Lazy Eye' by Donna Daley-Clarke, Paul Murray's beautifully written 'An Evening of Long Goodbyes' and the beguiling ambiguity of Kevin Patton's 'Transient'.
