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The best recent poetry โ€“ review roundup
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๐Ÿ‡ฌ๐Ÿ‡ง United Kingdomโ€ขJune 5, 2026

The best recent poetry โ€“ review roundup

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Originally published byThe Guardian

Haunting the Black Air by Anthony Joseph; Selected Poems by Leontia Flynn; Sparrow on the Rooftop by Rachel Long; You Must Live: New Poetry from Palestine, edited by Jorie Graham; Melete by Jennifer Lee Tsai; Somebody Should Have Pressed Record by Galia Admoni

Haunting the Black Air by Anthony Joseph (Bloomsbury, ยฃ12.99)
Josephโ€™s follow-up to the 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 โ€œNostalgia, mostly grief, / a haunting sound โ€“ / the frequency of some / magnetic feeling.โ€ That makes for challenging syntax on first reading the poems. Persist, and Josephโ€™s unabashed lyricism shines through, finding beauty on dancefloors, city streets and in Trinidadian landscapes: โ€œthe way music fills the room, how we embrace until / we become flare bright, light as the white refraction / of the sun upon the summit of hills.โ€

Selected Poems by Leontia Flynn (Carcanet, ยฃ14.99)
She was a Next Generation poet and Forward prize winner; itโ€™s a shock to remember that Flynn has been publishing for more than 20 years, so fresh do her poems remain. This assembly is a glorious reintroduction to her mordant wit, imaginative image-making and unerring ability to puncture pretension. Letter to Friends from 2011 is a brilliant, Auden-esque dissection of the early 21st century, worth a library of political analyses: โ€œdaily threats brought to our Way of Life / by man-made imminent apocalypse / though neither really outweighs private griefโ€. There are pleasures on every page.

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