Granny Scarecrow

by Anne Stevenson

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Book cover for Granny Scarecrow

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Anne Stevenson has always been a restless, questioning poet whose openness has ensured that each of her many collections has been distinctive and challenging. Granny Scarecrow is characteristically full of ideas, but as always, Stevenson approaches them by looking intently at small things and seemingly insignificant events. In creating a poetry of acute psychological insight, alert to all shades of meaning, she has managed to be incisive as well as entertaining, marrying critical rigour with personal feeling, and a sharp wit with an original brand of serious humour.

Anne Stevenson was trained as a musician and came to poetry with her auditory imagination already developed. For over forty years she has been writing poetry primarily to be heard and overheard. Experimenting with sounds and verse forms has encouraged experiments with subject matter, and Granny Scarecrow is brimming with ideas that – plainly to the author’s amusement – contradict each other. The title-poem starts out as a simple tale about two farm girls passing their granny’s dress on a scarecrow, but it opens up into an elegy for the passing of a way of life.

The book as a whole stresses that looking, not thinking, makes for a poetry of compassion and communication. What the poem says – and how it sounds – is inseparable from what it is.
  • ISBN13 9781852245344
  • Publish Date 25 May 2000
  • Publish Status Out of Print
  • Out of Print 13 October 2006
  • Publish Country GB
  • Imprint Bloodaxe Books Ltd
  • Format Paperback
  • Pages 160
  • Language English