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Into the light

by
November 2008, no. 306

The Golden Bird: New and selected poems by Robert Adamson

Black Inc., $27.95 pb, 306 pp

Into the light

by
November 2008, no. 306

From his first book Canticles on the Skin (1970) to his twelfth, The Goldfinches of Baghdad (2006), Robert Adamson’s poetry has undergone many transformations, but The Golden Bird, his new and rather large Selected Poems, modifies or disguises those changes by arranging the poems thematically, not chronologically, except for the last section, which contains new poems. Many of Adamson’s early themes have remained throughout his career. Strangely, the sharply witty ‘Sonnets to be Written from Prison’ (‘If I was in solitary I could dream – a fashionable bore, / writing books on drugs, birds or revolution’), from his third book Swamp Riddles (1974), are excluded along with other fine poems, such as ‘Sibyl’ and ‘The Thoughtless Shore’, his elegy to Michael Dransfield, as well as the chapbook Theatre (1974), a response to Yves Bonnefoy’s work of that name.

Gig Ryan reviews ‘The Golden Bird: New and selected poems’ by Robert Adamson

The Golden Bird: New and selected poems

by Robert Adamson

Black Inc., $27.95 pb, 306 pp

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