Hoard brings together poems Fleur Adcock had to keep under wraps for several years because they didn't suit the themes of her last two collections, The Land Ballot and Glass Wings. They include reflections on the tools of her trade (handwriting, typewriters), snatches of autobiography (a brief, ill-considered second marriage followed by her migration from New Zealand to England in 1963), and poems on trees, wildlife and everyday objects. Ellen Wilkinson, who led the Jarrow March in 1936, makes two appearances, joining Coleridge, several ancestors and two dogs. The most recent poems in the book recall Adcock's visits around the North Island of New Zealand in 2015, affirming her renewed although not uncritical affection for the country of her birth. Poetry Book Society Special Commendation.
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'A COVENTRY HALF PENNY': a token minted in 1669 by some trader in that city to make up for a shortage of small change LOOT
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(@BloodaxeBooks, 23 November 2017, e-book, 64 pages, borrowed from @natpoetrylib via @OverDriveLibs)
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I've read quite a lot of Adcock's poetry and am a fan of her work. I really enjoyed the poems in this collection. Hoard is split into five sections which I read one section a day. Hoard contains some quite dark poems about her ex-husband, Barry Crump who was quite a violent person. I'd do idea about this and these poems stood out the most, her hurt really comes off the page. The best poems are Flat-Warning Party 1968, The March, My Erstwhile Fans and Raglan.