The Blue Hour

To hell with the small life. I am not exquisite.
Cannot sing like bone china. This is the blue hour.

I swim in it, alone and perfectly.

Seven years after Envies the Birds appeared to wide acclaim, Longbarrow Press is delighted to announce the publication of The Blue Hour, the second full-length poetry collection by Angelina D’Roza.

“Melancholic, beautifully contemplative poems, fusing binaries of past, present, memory and fiction, temporality and arrested time … Solace is in the repetition, in cyclicality. Endings are always beginnings.’—Ágnes Lehóczky on The Blue Hour.

The Blue Hour
£13 (special launch price)

UK orders (+ £2.50 postage)

Europe orders (+ £6.45 postage)

Rest of World orders (+ £11.25 postage)

A beautifully produced 96-page hardback, The Blue Hour is available now from Longbarrow Press. You can order the book securely by clicking on the relevant PayPal link above (major debit cards accepted – no PayPal account required). Click here to read ‘Lullaby’; click here to read ‘Frangipani’; click here to read ‘The Hathersage Road’.

“Last year we buried the remains of my Dad, his ashes, in a place that he knew, and that he loved. And the word grave & the word grief, they are gathered in the word gravity. We are all pulled back to our ground.”

A new piece by Mark Goodwin (with photographs by Nikki Clayton) examines the phenomenology of place and the (literal) pull of ground. Click here to read ‘Gathering Matters’ on the Longbarrow Blog.

The last day to order books for Christmas delivery (to UK addresses, via Royal Mail) is Sunday 17 December. We’ll be delivering orders throughout Sheffield over the weekend of 23/24 December (on foot); any orders to Sheffield addresses received by 22 December will be delivered in time for Christmas. We can gift-wrap your orders and/or send them to a different UK address at no extra cost; simply email Brian Lewis at longbarrowpress@gmail.com with the details. Click here to browse our current publications. We also offer Longbarrow Gift Certificates (ideal for those last-minute presents); click here for details.

 

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Autumn Almanac

I lift a gift of conkers from September,
  Wrapped up in Weston Park, and press and
Savour their cool smoothness and remember
  Twenty autumns back…

“One of the central concerns of Sheffield Almanac is to what extent it’s desirable and indeed possible for a city to be different from other cities in the same modern, developed nation. Since the first edition was published, the Ikea outlet referred to in the first chapter has finally opened and the city centre has grown quieter with the Covid-era closure of many shops and pubs. However, the city’s ineffable gentleness of mood and “warming core of goodwill”, which attracted me to relocate here almost twenty years ago, seem remarkably unaltered.”  Six years after it first appeared in print, Pete Green‘s debut pamphlet Sheffield Almanac is available in a new edition from Longbarrow Press. The second edition features a redesigned cover, and a new afterword by Green. Click here to order the pamphlet.

“Minibus travel is an excellent way to get to know people: a mental zig-zag of free-associating chat, sometimes intense, sometimes light, often punctuated by silent gazing out of the window, or with refreshment breaks in the chaotic bustle of motorway service stations. On the journey south we stopped at the Somerset village of East Coker to discuss T.S. Eliot’s poem of the same name: an opportunity to open doors into poetry’s spiritual potential in the tumultuous modern world.”  In July 2023, a small group of students and lecturers spent four days at Hilfield Friary, Dorset, on a writing and reading retreat, exploring the life, poetry and journals of the poet Gerard Manley Hopkins, with excursions to nearby settlements, hills and cliffs. Matthew Clegg‘s account of the retreat (with photographs by Richi Lyle) reflects on polarization, connection, and the creative writing that developed at the Friary. Click here to read ‘Another Intensity’ on the Longbarrow Blog.

Like this, like light returning from one mirror
to another, we create each other.

Seven years after Envies the Birds appeared to wide acclaim, Longbarrow Press is delighted to announce the publication of The Blue Hour, the second full-length collection by Angelina D’Roza.

“Melancholic, beautifully contemplative poems, fusing binaries of past, present, memory and fiction, temporality and arrested time…”—Ágnes Lehóczky.
The Blue Hour is published as a 96-page hardback on 9 November; click here to order the book (at a special launch price). Click here to read a poem from The Blue Hour.

Finally, Chris Jones has devised and launched The Two-Way Poetry Podcast, a biweekly series of interviews where he speaks to poets about their own creative inspirations and practice. He reflects on the idea that when poets create poems, they are often ‘in conversation’ with other writers’ works. Click here to listen to Chris’s short introduction to the series. The first full podcast is a discussion with the poet Rob Hindle about William Blake’s poem ‘The Sick Rose’ and how it influenced his own ‘The Sick Rose’ (from his Longbarrow Press collection Sapo). Listen to it here.

 

 

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