The poems in Gillian Clarke's The Silence begin during lockdown, whose silences Clarke listens so attentively that other voices emerge.
Gillian Clarke Orden de los libros
Gillian Clarke es una figura central de la poesía galesa contemporánea, con una obra profundamente moldeada por el paisaje galés. Sus poemas exploran temas perdurables como la guerra, la feminidad y el paso del tiempo con una voz distintiva. Más allá de su aclamada escritura, ha influido significativamente en el mundo literario a través de su labor docente y editorial. La poderosa poesía de Clarke sigue resonando en los lectores, ofreciendo profundas reflexiones sobre la experiencia humana.






- 2024
- 2021
A collection of essays on nature and the environmental crisis from the former National Poet of Wales.
- 2021
The timeless and compelling 'word-music' of one of Britain's oldest cultural treasures is captured in this new bilingual edition. The Gododdin charts the rise and fall of 363 warriors in the battle of Catraeth, around the year AD 600.
- 2017
The long-awaited new collection from the former National Poet of Wales.
- 2016
A stunning collection from one of the most important figures in poetry today.
- 2015
- 2015
Shorelines: Artists on the South Coast
- 112 páginas
- 4 horas de lectura
Art catalogue to accompany an art exhibition, featuring works by a number of artists. Related to artists working on the south coast of England.
- 2014
The Christmas Wren
- 16 páginas
- 1 hora de lectura
Candlestick Press offers completely unique and beautiful poetry chapbooks, which can to be given instead of a greeting card. The chapbooks are designed and printed in the UK on high quality, tactile paper and are packaged with a bookmark `left blank
- 2012
Randolph Schwabe
- 168 páginas
- 6 horas de lectura
This is the first book on the life and career of the distinguished British artist and teacher Randolph Schwabe (1885-1948) who was Professor and Principal of the Slade School either side of the Second World War. Schwabe was known as 'a scholarly artist' and meticulous draughtsman who influenced a generation of students, yet to date little has been written about his significant contribution to the practice and spirit of twentieth-century British art. Schwabe exhibited widely and was a close friend of Charles Rennie Mackintosh and Margaret Macdonald, and also of Francis Unwin, Albert Rutherston, Muirhead Bone and others from the artistic and literary worlds. Unprecedented access to family documents together with reminiscences from his former students provide a vivid and rich record.
- 2011
Late Antiquity: A Very Short Introduction
- 128 páginas
- 5 horas de lectura
The time known as Late Antiquity (c.300-c.800) was a fascinatingly diverse and important period which saw the 'Fall of Rome' and the growth of Christianity and Islam. Gillian Clark explores its historical controversies, introducing the main characters and themes, and demonstrating the transition between the medieval and ancient.