Sinéad Morrissey was born in 1972 and grew up in Belfast, Northern Ireland. She is the author of five poetry collections: There Was Fire in Vancouver, Between Here and There, The State of the Prisons, Through the Square Window, and Parallax. She has been the recipient of the 2013 T. S. Eliot Prize, the Patrick Kavanagh Poetry Award, the Irish Times Poetry Now Award, a Lannan Literary Fellowship, and first place in the 2007 UK National Poetry Competition. She teaches creative writing at the Seamus Heaney Centre for Poetry, Queen's University, Belfast.
"Parallax" is an ambitious and complex collection . . .
Structurally, the poems are beautiful: riddled with subterranean
passages and false doors, they're easy places to lose your
intellectual footing . . . [Morrissey] feels like one of the
country's leading poets.--Charlotte Runcie "The Telegraph "
Morrissey is one of a number of younger poets from Northern Ireland
who are negotiating the mixed blessing of having such illustrious
antecedents as [Derek] Mahon and Seamus Heaney. To honour such
inheritance requires all the confidence and care of a high-wire act
. . . Morrissey is more than up to the task.--Paul Batchelor "The
Guardian "
The outstanding poet of her generation.--Stephen Knight "The
Independent "
""Parallax" is something of a treasure trove . . . Morrissey's
poetic framings and exposures of author, reader/viewer, and object
in dynamic and angular relation to each other make her a compelling
advocate, and exemplary practitioner, of both seeing and doing
things differently." --Fran Brearton, "The Guardian"
"The outstanding poet of her generation." "--Independent"
Ask a Question About this Product More... |