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The Threadbare Coat
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 144

The Threadbare Coat

Shortlisted for the Scottish Poetry Book of the Year 2021 Longlisted for the Laurel Prize 2021 A Telegraph Book of the Year 2020 This Selected celebrates Scotland's most distinctive contemporary writer, a vivid minimalist, ruralist, and experimentalist.

In Praise of Walking
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 4

In Praise of Walking

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2004
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

Farm by the Shore
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 102

Farm by the Shore

In Farm by the Shore, Thomas A Clark explores the landscape and culture of the Scottish highlands and islands through experience of covering the ground. His notations and fragments keep the precarious balance between sea and land, wilderness and civilisation. Everything is played out in a context of weather. The spaces between the poems, which both link and divide them, are shades of quiet, indications of time or distance, or graphs of the vagaries of attention. In such a climate, to farm, or walk, or write, is to persist. You come to one thing and then another. // 'With radical simplicity, Thomas A Clark's writing gives us the unfussy beauty of the natural world. There's not much that I ask of poetry that isn't present here.' Matthew Welton

That Which Appears
  • Language: en

That Which Appears

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2024-04
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  • Publisher: Unknown

that which appears gathers together four book-length sequences; The Hundred Thousand Places, Yellow & Blue and Farm by the Shore, all previously published by Carcanet, plus the title book, that which appears, published by Paragon Press (1994).The poems gathered in that which appears emerge from a practice of walking in the varied landscapes of the highlands and islands of Scotland. They attempt to attend and respond to the evidence, to 'snow on moss on stone', with 'small continual adjustments'.A conviction grows that environmental damage can only begin to be repaired by many careful and repeated acts of attention. How can we move here with resourcefulness and least intrusion? Can poetry be generous in response while subject to an ethic of care for place and particularity? Can it provide spaces that will allow for, that welcome and celebrate, that which appears?

Riasg Buidhe
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 14

Riasg Buidhe

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1987
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

The Hundred Thousand Places
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 99

The Hundred Thousand Places

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2011-08-01
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  • Publisher: Carcanet

To walk through a landscape is to be part of a slow unfolding of time and distance, to commit yourself to an adventure. The Hundred Thousand Places is a single poem that travels across seasons, through a variety of Scottish highland and island landscapes, from dawn to dusk. Make an early start, 'feel your way out / into what might...take form'. It is a long walk, along the coast, over mountain and moorland, through pine and birch forest, ending on a shore where the sea offers 'another knowledge / wild and cold'. Attentive and responsive, the unhurried pace of Thomas A. Clark's writing draws the reader into a shared journey, pausing on the possibilities of a phrase, the music of the names of trees and flowers, or turning the page to open new horizons.

The Itchy Coo Book of Hans Christian Andersen's Fairy Tales in Scots
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 128

The Itchy Coo Book of Hans Christian Andersen's Fairy Tales in Scots

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2020-09-24
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  • Publisher: Itchy Coo

Welcome to the wonderful fairytale world of Hans Christian Andersen . . . retold for today's children in Scots for the very first time. This classic collection brings together nine favourite stories, from the fun and humour of the proud Emperor with his splendid new clothes, to the gentle sadness of the Little Mermaid. With a colourful cast of witches, princesses, toys and animals, this rich and varied collection is guaranteed to delight and entertain readers young and old. Emma Chichester Clark's glorious illustrations bring the tales vividly to life, making this book a joy to share and a gift to treasure.

Doubting Thomas: A Novel
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 343

Doubting Thomas: A Novel

Thomas McGurrin is a fourth-grade teacher and openly gay man at a private primary school serving Portland, Oregon's wealthy progressive elite when he is falsely accused of inappropriately touching a male student. The accusation comes just as Thomas is thrust back into the center of his unusual family by his younger brother's battle with cancer. Although cleared of the accusation, Thomas is forced to resign from a job he loves during a potentially life-changing family drama. Davison's novel explores the discrepancy between the progressive ideals and persistent negative stereotypes among the privileged regarding social status, race, and sexual orientation and the impact of that discrepancy on friendships and family relations.

Yellow & Blue
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 105

Yellow & Blue

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2014-02-27
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  • Publisher: Carcanet

The poems in this book form a series of small acts of attention, repeated attempts to step outside the circle of human concern and into a wider responsibility to the natural world. 'To move among / crashing pines / is spacious / and exact.' Yellow & Blue invites us to share the spaciousness of a book-length journey, an exacting clarity of perception.

Thomas D. Clark of Kentucky: An Uncommon Life in the Commonwealth
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 276

Thomas D. Clark of Kentucky: An Uncommon Life in the Commonwealth

" Winner of the Seaborg Award A History Book Club Selection On October 8, 1862, Union and Confederate forces clashed near Perryville, Kentucky, in what would be the largest battle ever fought on Kentucky soil. The climax of a campaign that began two months before in northern Mississippi, Perryville came to be recognized as the high water mark of the western Confederacy. Some said the hard-fought battle, forever remembered by participants for its sheer savagery and for their commandersÕ confusion, was the worst battle of the war, losing the last chance to bring the Commonwealth into the Confederacy and leaving Kentucky firmly under Federal control. Although Gen. Braxton BraggÕs Confederates...