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Continental Shelf

Fred D'Aguiar

Continental Shelf by Fred d'Aguiar
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Categories: 21st Century, BAME, British, Caribbean
Imprint: Carcanet Poetry
Publisher: Carcanet Press
Available as:
Paperback (80 pages)
(Pub. May 2009)
9781847770431
£9.95 £8.96
  • Description
  • Excerpt
  • Author
  • Contents
  • Reviews
  • Demerara whose east coast raised me
    From a mere stalk to stand straight

    To stand tall no matter what current
    Help me find your grain your flow
    And Demerara sweeten me

    So my art keeps your river's caveat
    Your sense of cane fields bathed in sweat

    from 'Demerara Sugar' by Fred D'Aguiar
    Continental Shelf traces a journey, across continents and from youth to maturity. It moves from memories of childhood in Guyana, through a long elegiac exploration of the shootings at Virginia Tech University in 2006, to the reflective closing section which gives its title to the book. Fred D'Aguiar celebrates individuals and the histories embedded in places. He conjures up a sensuous childhood world of characters, stories, a loved particularity - a smell of bitumen, the local hero who comes last in a National Cycle Championship, a distant train's incantation of 'greenheart, mora, baromalli' - impressions so distinct and powerful that 'fumes... spin my head / Back whenever I catch a whiff from a car'. In D'Aguiar's Elegies for the thirty-three people who died in Virginia, that loss of unique and particular individuals is mourned, in a scrutiny of what civil and private life has become, and how, alongside grief, we may recover delight in the world. In his first full-length collection since Bill of Rights (1998), D'Aguiar celebrates how imagination and memory enable us to cope with violence and death. Love, above all, is the mainstay.
    Contents


    Local Colour


    Bring Back, Bring Back
    A Clean Slate
    The Return
    At Sea
    Reap
    Calypso
    Railway
    Tributary
    H2O
    Matriarch
    Something Imagined
    Tamarind Season
    Playing House
    R O Y G B I V
    Caribbean
    Bullroarer
    The Barber-Green
    Caiman
    Snake and Ladder
    After Birth
    Ledge
    Pan
    S-Joe
    Dara Singh
    Demerara Sugar
    Leaving
    Sabbatic
    The Shell Pond
    National Cycle Championship
    Subaltern
    The Never-Never
    Houses not Homes
    Guyana Dreaming Wilson Harris
    Local Colour
    Succession

    Elegies

    Continental Shelf

    Well
    Martial Art
    3am
    Jump Rope
    Moonwalk
    Star Fruit
    Continental Shelf
    Fred D'Aguiar was born in London of Guyanese parents, and grew up in Guyana before returning to London for his secondary and tertiary education. He has lived in the US since the mid-90s and currently he is Professor of English at UCLA. He trained as a psychiatric nurse before reading African ... read more
     'D'Aguiar interrogates and reassesses whatever he sees in a poetry that is flexible and fast paced, every action, every relationship thrown into fierce relief by a sense of threat and insecurity...'
    Charles Bainbridge, The Guardian
    Praise for Fred D'Aguiar 'Throughout the collection, D'Aguiar crafts brilliant, exhilarating moments with thoughtful uses of the line.... For the Unnamed is an accomplishment that deserves repeated readings.'

    Eric Yip, Poetry London

      'D'Aguiar's rhymes give the dialogues between Black Swan and the jockey and irresistible energy as freed slave and horse find common ground... It's a glorious gallop of a book.'

    Rishi Dastidar, The Guardian

    'D'Aguiar's electric prose vividly recounts a cancer diagnosis and treatment in the Covid year, a private suffering amid a collective one.'

    Sandeep Parmar, New Statesman

    'Nothing in this book is sentimental or simple... Reading Year of Plagues is a contradictory experience. Both its language and the experience it conveys are too complex and rich to skim over, and yet the prose has an ongoing urgency, speed and impatience that hustle the reader along. Time passes both slowly and quickly... Yet when he breaks into song or waxes rhapsodic, time stops.'

    Rachel Hadas, Times Literary Supplement

    'I've long admired D'Aguiar's poetry for its musicality, which rarely has anything less than perfect pitch, even when taking on extended narrative or dramatic monologue... Still, there's a shift in these Letters, even more swing and dare in the language and an unflinching political activism. Put simply, D'Aguiar is writing the most accomplished and interesting work of his life.'

    James Byrne, The Poetry Review

     
    'sharply observed...Part of [D'Aguiar's] defiance in the face of cancer is to throw everything he has onto the page. The result is weird and articulate and angry... his rage to live shivers in every sentence... I'm happy to report that Year of Plagues ends on a cautiously upbeat note. Cancer's had to pipe down.'

    Dwight Garner, New York Times
    'A visceral account of personal illness and social ills'

    Kirkus Reviews

    'Throughout, the author's resilience inspires. This makes the fragility of life devastatingly palpable.'

    Pulishers Weekly

      'In parts of Letters to America, Fred D'Aguiar comes to seem like Walcott's true twenty-first-century heir ... Fred D'Aguiar has written 'a canticle of water', a book for the individual bowed, imperilled, under the wave of history - monarchical and imperial - and crying out for collective action to stop it from consuming further shores. Letters to America is emphatically worth reading.'

    Camille Ralphs, Ambit
    'There are some exceptional poems, including the title poem Letters to America (An Abecedary) [...] The poetry is vibrant and musical'

    Adrian B. Earle, Poetry Birmingham Literary Journal

    'An array of sublime poems that unfold unsettling accounts of 'black' identity and the horrors of slavery...written with refreshing candour.'
    Mohammad Fahran, Wasafiri
    'Translations from Memory everywhere suggests the vital necessity of continually revisiting and revising our cultural past... It asserts the presence of those who have been written out of it and shows how the complex legacies of slavery and colonialism remain under-explored and undigested.'
    Sarala Estruch, The Times Literary Supplement
    'D'Aguiar manages to weave together memoir, history and critical race theory in ways that deepen our understanding of his poetics...Translations from Memory [...] will no doubt cement his standing as one of the most important Guyanese writers of the twentieth century.'
    Leo Boix, Poetry London
     'D'Aguiar is not generally concerned with textual translation in this collection: he applies the word in a broader sense... abbreviations seem part of the serious trans-cultural game, inviting recognition, but also making the outsider notice the limits and exclusions their own education has entailed. Whether the planet's human creatures might coexist without radically mistranslating each other is one of the vigorously posed questions.'
    'Reformation' was The Guardian's Poem of the Week, September 24th 2018

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