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Hold Your Own: Kate Tempest (Picador poetry)
Kae Tempest
€ 14.99
€ 11.89
FREE Delivery in Ireland
Description for Hold Your Own: Kate Tempest (Picador poetry)
paperback. New poetry from a fiercely talented, Ted Hughes Award-winning poet Num Pages: 128 pages. BIC Classification: DCF. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 153 x 198 x 12. Weight in Grams: 204.
Hold Your Own, Kae Tempest's first full-length collection for Picador is an ambitious, multi-voiced work based around the mythical figure of Tiresias. This four-part work follows him through his transformations from child, man and woman to blind prophet; through this structure, Tempest holds up a mirror to contemporary life in a direct and provocative way rarely associated with poetry.
A vastly popular and accomplished performance poet, Tempest commands a huge and dedicated following on the performance and rap circuit. Brand New Ancients, also available from Picador, won the Ted Hughes Award for New Work in Poetry and has played to packed concert halls on both sides of the Atlantic.
Product Details
Format
Paperback
Publication date
2014
Publisher
Picador
Condition
New
Number of Pages
128
Place of Publication
London, United Kingdom
ISBN
9781447241218
SKU
9781447241218
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 2 to 4 working days
Ref
99-1
About Kae Tempest
Kae Tempest writes rhymes, lyrics, poems, prose and plays. Tempest began at sixteen, rapping in battles across London, and began performing spoken word at the age of twenty-one. Tempest has performed theirwriting on stages all over the world, as well as playing all the major UK and European music festivals, including Glastonbury. Tempest has written poems for Barnado's children's charity, the BBC, Amnesty International, the Royal Shakespeare Company and Turner Prize winning artist Chris Offili. Tempest is two times poetry slam winner at the prestigious Nu-Yorican poetry cafe in New York. Tempest has supported legendary punk poet John Cooper Clarke and supported Billy Bragg on his Leftfield in Motion UK tour with their band Sound of Rum. Tempest's published work, Brand New Ancients won the Ted Hughes Prize for innovation in poetry.
Reviews for Hold Your Own: Kate Tempest (Picador poetry)
Poet, performer, novelist: the rise of the uncategorisable Kate Tempest
Laura Barton
Guardian
Tempest's voice looks to be one we will be hearing for some while to come
Laura Barton
Guardian
Dazzling wordsmithery. . . As anyone who has seen her perform will know, she doesn't just paint pictures with words when she performs, she paints fireworks in the night sky
Claire Allfree
Metro
A winning wielder of words. . . The common thread through Tempest's diverse work is her love of words. In mesmerising rhyme and galloping rhythm, her passion for the classics collides with urban street slang, social observation, consumerism and the concerns of contemporary youth
Michael Hogan
Observer
The picture emerges of a diverse, fluid writer and performer who is spreading her wings anew
Charles Hutchinson
Press (York)
Hold Your Own is a collection of discrete, sometimes startlingly intimate moments by turns tender, funny, and angry. . . among the warmest moments in the collection are those that celebrate this particular, catalytic thrill - of the instant when words are not just lived, but delivered
Lauren Strain
Skinny
Hold Your Own is intellectually as well as emotionally exhilarating, yet unafraid to challenge the purveyors of wilful obscurity . . . With her poems about change and growth and passion, this girl is going places - and I'll be glad to go with
Daily Mail
Her reworking of the Tiresias myth has all of the form's virtues . . . a powerful immediacy
Belfast Telegraph
Her opening poem here is the longest, an updating of the story of Tiresias, and is both politically and emotionally stark, while the rest explore the human passion with a refreshing toughness
Sunday Herald
Tempest collection feels like a game-changer. Tempest has forged her own voice, unlike anything else in the mainstream poetry world
Independent on Sunday
Tempest follows her Ted Hughes Prize-winning Brand New Ancients with a bold retelling of the myth of Tiresias. In a voice at once inviting and challenging, erudite and incongruous, the 28-year-old south Londoner confirms her position as one of literature's most remarkable millennials
Books of the Year 2014
Financial Times
Hold Your Own sees her stepping into the world of traditional "slim volume verse," publishing a book of poems to be read as well as heard. And she steps in with style . . . The contrast between the wasteground filled with shopping trolleys and used condoms and the miraculous transformation is dramatic and comic and moving . . . Either in person or on the page, she shows she's got sharp, important things to say and the poetic skills to say them
Solomon Hughes
Morning Star
Like the great Philip Larkin, Ms. Tempest has an ability to write about big, metaphysical subjects in the most vernacular language, while conjuring a sense of contemporary English life with a handful of chiseled lines . . .She demonstrates a knack - in both "Brand New Ancients" and "Hold Your Own" - for being able to shuttle easily back and forth between the mundane and the mythic, the banal and philosophical, and for using her pictorial imagination to sear specific images into the reader's mind
Michiko Kakutani
New York Times
Laura Barton
Guardian
Tempest's voice looks to be one we will be hearing for some while to come
Laura Barton
Guardian
Dazzling wordsmithery. . . As anyone who has seen her perform will know, she doesn't just paint pictures with words when she performs, she paints fireworks in the night sky
Claire Allfree
Metro
A winning wielder of words. . . The common thread through Tempest's diverse work is her love of words. In mesmerising rhyme and galloping rhythm, her passion for the classics collides with urban street slang, social observation, consumerism and the concerns of contemporary youth
Michael Hogan
Observer
The picture emerges of a diverse, fluid writer and performer who is spreading her wings anew
Charles Hutchinson
Press (York)
Hold Your Own is a collection of discrete, sometimes startlingly intimate moments by turns tender, funny, and angry. . . among the warmest moments in the collection are those that celebrate this particular, catalytic thrill - of the instant when words are not just lived, but delivered
Lauren Strain
Skinny
Hold Your Own is intellectually as well as emotionally exhilarating, yet unafraid to challenge the purveyors of wilful obscurity . . . With her poems about change and growth and passion, this girl is going places - and I'll be glad to go with
Daily Mail
Her reworking of the Tiresias myth has all of the form's virtues . . . a powerful immediacy
Belfast Telegraph
Her opening poem here is the longest, an updating of the story of Tiresias, and is both politically and emotionally stark, while the rest explore the human passion with a refreshing toughness
Sunday Herald
Tempest collection feels like a game-changer. Tempest has forged her own voice, unlike anything else in the mainstream poetry world
Independent on Sunday
Tempest follows her Ted Hughes Prize-winning Brand New Ancients with a bold retelling of the myth of Tiresias. In a voice at once inviting and challenging, erudite and incongruous, the 28-year-old south Londoner confirms her position as one of literature's most remarkable millennials
Books of the Year 2014
Financial Times
Hold Your Own sees her stepping into the world of traditional "slim volume verse," publishing a book of poems to be read as well as heard. And she steps in with style . . . The contrast between the wasteground filled with shopping trolleys and used condoms and the miraculous transformation is dramatic and comic and moving . . . Either in person or on the page, she shows she's got sharp, important things to say and the poetic skills to say them
Solomon Hughes
Morning Star
Like the great Philip Larkin, Ms. Tempest has an ability to write about big, metaphysical subjects in the most vernacular language, while conjuring a sense of contemporary English life with a handful of chiseled lines . . .She demonstrates a knack - in both "Brand New Ancients" and "Hold Your Own" - for being able to shuttle easily back and forth between the mundane and the mythic, the banal and philosophical, and for using her pictorial imagination to sear specific images into the reader's mind
Michiko Kakutani
New York Times