THE POETRY BOOK
SOCIETY BULLETIN
Four times a year,
PBS Members receive the Bulletin,
a 32 page magazine packed with exclusive reviews
by our Poet Selectors of the Choice and Recommendations,
the Special Commendation, the Recommended Translation
and the Pamphlet Choice. The PBS-Selected poets are invited to write short articles on their own collections, which provide a fascinating insight into their work, and there are reviews of other new books, poems, special
offers and listings of every new title submitted
to us. Each Bulletin
offers you up to 80 new collections, anthologies,
critical works, biographies, translations, pamphlets,
Poetry Archive CDs and children's poetry books,
at discounts of up to 25%. It amounts to nothing less than a quarterly review of the new poetry.
The Bulletin is part
of the proud history of the PBS and has been published
continuously, in different formats, since T S
Eliot and friends set up the PBS in 1953. We redesigned it in 2007 to give it a fresh new look and a larger and more readable typeface.
Members can log
on to the members’ site to
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View
a recent issue of the Bulletin.
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The Bulletin has been published continuously
since 1953. |
Don't Ask Me What I Mean
This fascinating anthology was published in 2003 to
celebrate the PBS' 50th anniversary. Clare Brown (PBS
Director of the time) and poet and editor Don Paterson explored the Bulletin
archives and extracted the pithiest and most revealing
poets' articles from 1953 onwards.
The book itself is a comprehensive guide to the last
50 years of British poetry - written by the poets
themselves. In this collection of short essays,
the reader finds the last words Louis MacNeice
wrote before his death, Ted Hughes on The Hawk
in the Rain, Paul Muldoon on the etymology
of 'quoof', Carol Ann Duffy on difficulties with
gonks, and Simon Armitage on the Dead Sea Scrolls. There are also rare contributions from Seamus Heaney, Philip
Larkin, Kingsley Amis, U A Fanthorpe, Jo Shapcott,
Geoffrey Hill, Michael Donaghy, Elizabeth Jennings
and many others.
Together they comprise a candid,
funny, intellectually brilliant and deeply personal
account of one the most turbulent and fascinating
periods in recent literary history. Unprecedented
in its scope - and its scoops - Don't Ask Me
What I Mean is essential reading, both for
the poetry aficionado and for the uninitiated
- and provides a unique insight into some of the
most remarkable minds of our time.
Don't Ask Me What I Mean can be ordered
from the Poetry Bookshop Online by clicking here. |
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