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Entertainment Jun 05, 2026

Recent Poetry Reviews: A Roundup of Exceptional Works

A collection of recent poetry reviews from The Guardian, highlighting exceptional works by various …
Discovering New Voices in Poetry A recent review roundup from The Guardian showcases a diverse selection of poetry collections, each offering unique perspectives and styles. The review highlights six exceptional works, providing insight into the world of contemporary poetry. Haunting the Black Air by Anthony Joseph Joseph's follow-up to his TS Eliot prize-winning Sonnets for Albert sees his poetic approach become more radical. He pays homage to avant-garde writers such as Will Alexander and Nathaniel Mackey, while exploring themes of nostalgia, grief, and magnetic feelings. Selected Poems by Leontia Flynn Flynn's collection is a glorious reintroduction to her mordant wit, imaginative image-making, and unerring ability to puncture pretension. Her poems remain fresh and relevant, even after more than 20 years of publishing. You Must Live: New Poetry from Palestine This anthology features over 30 poets living in Gaza and the West Bank, with work written in the last few years. The poems testify to the resilience of the artists and the role that poetry still has to give voice and bear witness in times of crisis. Melete by Jennifer Lee Tsai Lee Tsai's debut is a sprawling mix of poetry and prose exploring second-generation Chinese identity in the UK. The book feels roughly hewn, fiercely articulating the need to write and create something beautiful. Sparrow on the Rooftop by Rachel Long Long's second collection has replaced the playfulness of her debut with a directness of diction and image. The poems pull you up with their unflinching gaze, tackling topics such as alcoholism, eating disorders, and grief. Somebody Should Have Pressed Record by Galia Admoni Admoni's narrative poem explores the premise of starting a relationship with an imaginary version of an actor. Her tone is reminiscent of Georges Perec, both in its jabs at contemporary living and in what it reveals about the difficulties we have in making sense of ourselves in the absence of others.
#Poetry #The Guardian #Book Reviews
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Entertainment May 19, 2026

John Kearns' 'Tilting at Windmills': A Modernist Comedy of Broken Dreams

John Kearns returns with 'Tilting at Windmills,' a deeply personal comedy that weaves TS Eliot's mo…
The Modernist Comedian's Journey How has it come to this? That's what new show Tilting at Windmills finds John Kearns asking, and – after a fashion – it's what TS Eliot asked in The Waste Land, the modernist poem Kearns deploys here as an unlikely motif. After the breakup of a 12-year relationship with the mother of his son, we find the 39-year-old angrier than usual, and unmoored: flat-hunting pessimistically while living back home with mum and dad, roaming the streets of London having fled a disappointing walking tour based on Eliot's verse. High Culture Meets Everyday Life Sound clips of the poem, read by Alec Guinness, punctuate the show. They infuse it (as Van Gogh's Starry Night did with its predecessor, The Varnishing Days) equally with awe, at life's ineffable mysteries, and bathos – at the contrast between high literary culture and the humdrum realities of our host's life. Here he is shopping in Aldi with his mum; there he is naked and not very wet under a dripping shower. A remark about washing machines by a newspaper columnist induces a bout of class anxiety; an awkward teenage meeting is recalled with then-PM Tony Blair, who came to see Kearns' school play. Existential Questions and Personal Struggles Under Jon Brittain's direction, this all comes at us in Eliot-alike fragments, as Kearns bounces between existential conjecture (an encounter with ventriloquist Nina Conti has him wondering "am I my own puppet?!") and sadness at the wreckage of his domestic dreams. We're not let deeply into all that: no oversharer he. But if his real feelings are woven obliquely into this tapestry of a Streatham clown adrift, they remain palpable, not least in the surprising ferocity this usually low-key act brings to his dialogues with dimwit estate agent Connor, say, or with two poetry scholars in a pub over an illicit packet of prawn cocktail crisps. A Poignant Reflection on Modern Life Maybe its sharp edges, that sense of real hurt beneath the (very funny) gags about Kearns' limited commercial reach, forestall hilarity. But there's no resisting the care, the craft and the many beautifully turned phrases of a comic who "feels like he's being CC'ed into his own life". At its best, this show about The Waste Land itself aspires to wonderstruck, workaday poetry. Show Information Artist: John Kearns Show: Tilting at Windmills Director: Jon Brittain Touring to 6 November
#John Kearns #TS Eliot #The Waste Land
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