A New Thing Breathing.

By Gavin Bantock

Printed: 1969

Publisher: Anvil Press Poetry. Northwood, Middlesex

Dimensions 15 × 23 × 1 cm
Language

Language: English

Signed by: Richard Burns

Size (cminches): 15 x 23 x 1

£71.00
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Description

In the original dust jacket. Grey-green board binding with gilt title on the spine.

We provide an in-depth photographic presentation of this item to stimulate your feeling and touch. More traditional book descriptions are immediately available

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For conditions, please view our photographs. Gavin Bantock has written four extensive poems, of which two, `Ichor’ and `Hiroshima’, appeared in magazines and one, `Juggernaut’, as a pamphlet (Anvil Press Poetry, 1968). In these his poetic discipline has tautened. This book contains what we consider to be the finest of these poems, `Person’, a sustained and moving exploration of the nature of human identity and suffering; together with eleven short poems displaying a sure technique which is sensitive to a range of ideas and experience.

Gavin Bantock (born 4 July 1939) is an English poet; he is the grandson of Granville Bantock. He was born in Barnt Green, and attended New College, Oxford, where he won the Richard Hillary prize for poetry. He traveled to Japan in 1964 on the advice of his father, Raymond, and returned five years later to teach at Reitaku University. He has remained in the country ever since. Initially teaching English language and literature at Reitaku, he also began leading a group of students in productions of English plays, which eventually became his primary career. After retiring from Reitaku in 1994, he became the drama coach at Meitoku Gijuku High School in Kochi.

Many of Bantock’s poems treat elements of Christianity, history, mythology, or medieval and Renaissance literature in arresting, often disturbing terms. His book-length poem “Christ,” first published in 1965 and issued in a revised edition in 2020, is skeptical of “any idea of an innate and preordained divinity in an incarnate Christ,” according to Adrian A. Husain’s introduction to the revised edition. His poems “Joy” and “Dirge” were included by Philip Larkin in The Oxford Book of Twentieth Century English Verse. John Matthias included excerpts from Bantock’s “Hiroshima,” which Matthias calls “terrifying,” in the collection 23 Modern British Poets.

Condition notes

Dust jacket damp stained

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