<p>'Lavery expertly directs our attention <strong>to what we should see</strong> but choose not to'</p>

The Guardian

<p>'This <strong>confident, distinctive collection</strong> brokers no easy peace with past or present'</p>

The Scotsman

<p>'<strong>a fiercely tender exploration of women in the margins</strong>... as if Lavery's talents need any further preaching, Unwritten Woman hails her as <strong>a triumph</strong>'</p>

The Skinny

Se alle

<p> 'a historically, thematically, and <strong>stylistically rich</strong> new collection'</p>

The Bookseller

<p>'Unwritten Woman is not only the fierce work of speaking back, Lavery also <strong>creates spaces for much gentleness, love, vulnerability and calm</strong>'</p>

Gutter Magazine, Book of the Month

<p>'Delicate and furious, <em>Unwritten Woman</em> <strong>is an instant feminist classic</strong>, and a collection that should be on every young woman’s bookshelf, and beyond. It announces Lavery as <strong>a thinker of width, nuance, and challenge, asking the questions that might help us answer to ourselves.</strong> Outstanding'</p>

- Joelle Taylor,

<p>'This collection comes at you like a lantern from the shadows. With a creak of the floorboards and wash of delight, <strong>Hannah Lavery has brought something gothic and gorgeous to life in these pages</strong>' </p>

- William Letford,

<p>'Like the best of hard drinks, it lingers by the chesty bits with serious intent then makes its move on the heart's soft chambers. Never without its theatre, never without its thrum, through the tenderness it thrashes'</p>

- Micheal Pedersen,

<p>'These essential poems <strong>perfectly capture the “dreadful shipwreck”</strong> of not being easily categorised as one thing or another in a world that already resists writing you into its histories. <strong>Hannah's words reveal the enormous strength</strong> required to heal that fracture'</p>

- Marjorie Lotfi,

<p>'<em>Unwritten Woman</em> is an exquisite collection that highlights <strong>Hannah Lavery’s masterful skills with narrative and form</strong>. Lavery's skilful hand as a playwright<strong> adds thrilling dimension to these poems</strong>, and she crafts scenes that are imbued with a <strong>stunning poetics</strong>'</p>

- Alycia Pirmohamed,

<p>'Lavery's poems lift the woman from the margins. <strong>Often dark, sometimes hilarious, occasionally brutal,</strong> <em>Unwritten Woman</em> is <strong>a vital look at our culture through the lens of the other</strong>'</p>

- Jim Monaghan,

<p>'Part a love letter to her lost father; part homage to the silent women in Stevenson’s <em>Jekyll and Hyde</em>,  Hannah Lavery’s <em>Unwritten Woman</em> is a great broth of a book. A nod to Ntozake Shange with the haar coming in from the sea, Lavery takes us on a new uncharted journey.<strong> Tender and fierce. Her’s is a voice to reckon with!'</strong></p>

- Jackie Kay,

<p>'<strong>This book is a wonder</strong>; like sitting in a roomful of flickering midnight candles gazing into the most vivid of flames; <strong>utterly illuminating. Extraordinary!</strong>'</p>

- Hollie McNish,

<p>'<strong><em>Unwritten</em><em> Woman</em> is an extraordinary collection</strong>; absences revealed through erasure and attention to what is truly there. These poems are worthy of their source material. <strong>Read them</strong>'</p>

- Louise Welsh,

<p>'<strong>a stunning retelling</strong> of Robert Louis Stevenson’s The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde through the eyes of the women in the story'</p>

Books from Scotland

<p>'A <strong>glorious rallying cry for us</strong> to see and hear the women in the tales we read' </p>

- Nicola Meighan, A Kick up the Arts Podcast

Hannah Lavery's Unwritten Woman is a bold and lavish call for us to see the woman in the stories we read and tell ourselves.

From her search for the story, in her home city, Edinburgh, through her chilling re-telling of Robert Louis Stevenson's Jekyll & Hyde, elevating the women in that classic tale from being written between the lines, to the woman of colour, shouting from the sidelines of our cultural landscape.

Les mer

Hannah Lavery's Unwritten Woman is a bold and lavish call for us to see the woman in the stories we read and tell ourselves. It is a celebration of Lavery's home city, but also an exploration of gender, race and belonging.

Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781846976650
Publisert
2024-08-01
Utgiver
Vendor
Polygon An Imprint of Birlinn Limited
Vekt
146 gr
Høyde
198 mm
Bredde
129 mm
Dybde
7 mm
Aldersnivå
01, G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
160

Forfatter

Biographical note

Hannah Lavery is an award-winning poet and playwright. Her pamphlet, Finding Seaglass was published by Stewed Rhubarb and her poem, Scotland You’re No Mine was selected as one Scotland’s Best Poems for 2019. The Drift, her highly acclaimed autobiographical lyric play toured Scotland as part of the National Theatre of Scotland’s Season 2019. She was appointed Edinburgh Makar in November 2021 for a three year term. Her debut poetry collection, Blood Salt Spring was published in March 2022 (Polygon).