List Of Writers

PETIT, PASCALE

26 Clacton Road, London, E17 8AR
Tel: 020 85206693
Email: pascalepetit@btinternet.com
Website: http://www.pascalepetit.co.uk/
 
Pascale PetitPascale Petit was born in Paris, grew up in France and Wales and lives in London. In 2004 the Poetry Book Society and Arts Council named her as one of the Next Generation Poets. She has published three full–length poetry collections. Her last two collections, The Zoo Father (Seren, 2001) and The Huntress (Seren, 2005), were both shortlisted for the T. S. Eliot Prize and were both Books of the Year in the Times Literary Supplement. The Zoo Father was a Poetry Book Society Recommendation and a Book of the Year in the Independent. It won a major Arts Council of England Writers’ Award and a New London Writers’ Award. A poem from the book was also shortlisted for a Forward Prize for Best Single Poem. A Spanish/English bilingual edition is published in Mexico and she co–edited the first anthology from The Poetry School, Tying the Song (Enitharmon, 2000). A prizewinning pamphlet The Wounded Deer – Fourteen poems after Frida Kahlo (Smith Doorstop) also appeared in 2005.

She hosted the Guardian’s Poetry Workshop in June 2006. Her poems have been broadcast on BBC Radio 3 and 4, and published in journals in the UK, the US and Australia; including Poetry Review, American Poetry Review, Poetry Wales and Quadrant. They have been translated into Bulgarian, Chinese, Lithuanian, Spanish, Farsi, Japanese, Portuguese, German, Dutch and Romanian. Pascale Petit has travelled extensively in the Venezuelan Amazon and originally trained as a sculptor at the Royal College of Art. She was a co-founder of Poetry London, its Poetry Editor from 1989 to 2005, and is a founding tutor of The Poetry School. In 2004 she was selected as one of the ten best new women poets of the decade by Mslexia magazine. In 2005 she won an Arts Council of England award to take part in the Poet to Poet translation project in China and Scotland, translating poems by Yang Lian, Zhai Yong Ming, and Zhou Zan. She has given readings nationally and internationally, including at the Tampico International Literature Festival in Mexico, Lithuania, US, and at numerous UK venues including Tate Modern, Bloomsbury Theatre, the Royal Festival Hall, Ways With Words and the Hay Festival.

Pascale has been awarded a Grant for the Arts award from Arts Council England, London, and a grant from the Author’s Foundation, to complete two collections, The Treekeeper’s Tale (July 2008) and The Thorn Necklace – Forty poems after Frida Kahlo (2009), both to be published by Seren. The awards are to buy time and travel to Nepal for research.

Pascale has a number of courses running around the country in 2007. Please click here to view the opportunities pages for more information.

The photograph of Pascale displayed above is credited to Kitty Sullivan.

Reviews:

"…No other British poet I am aware of can match the powerful mythic imagination of Pascale Petit. The mother figure in her new collection The Huntress (Seren, 2005) appears as a ghost orchid, a rattlesnake, as geological forms and feathered Amerindian goddesses, all deeply imagined in perfect dreamlight focus. Baroque sinuosity seems a matter of fevered family relations, with a haunting mystical quality interfused…" Les Murray, Times Literary Supplement Books of the Year

“…A blazing new arrival…” Boyd Tonkin, The Independent Books of the Year

 "…A brave and unsettling collection. These are psychological explorations of relationships and power struggles that take risks…" Robyn Bolam, Poetry Review

"…Pascale Petit’s Larzac is one of the most powerfully imaginative and easily recognisable territories created in recent writing from the UK…" Robert Minhinnick,Poetry London


Selected Publications:
Icefall Climbing (Smith/Doorstep Books, 1994)
Heart of a Deer (Enitharmon, 1998)
The Zoo Father (Seren, 2001)
El Padre Zoológico / The Zoo Father (a bilingual edition published in Mexico) (El Toucan, 2004)
The Huntress (Seren, 2005)
The Wounded Deer: Fourteen Poems After Frida Kahlo (Smith/Doorstep Books, 2005)
The Treekeeper’s Tale (Seren, 2008)
The Thorn Necklace – Forty poems after Frida Kahlo (Seren, 2009)

Contributed to:
Tying the Song (co-editor) (Enitharmon, 2000)
Pendulum: The Poetry of Dreams (contributor) (Avalanche, 2008)



Eligible Writers on Tour subjects offered:
1. Readings from own poetry, discussions or interviews
2. Reading from essays
3. Creative writing workshops in poetry
4. Talks on editing and publishing poetry

AGE RANGE: older secondary school, and undergraduate to adult
SPECIAL REQUIREMENTS: non-car-driver


The Zoo Father (Seren, 2001)

The Zoo FatherAt the dark heart of this unique collection is a daughter’s fraught relationship with her dying father, a man whose legacy to her was violence and abandonment. Rich in the imagery of the Amazonian jungle (fire ants, shaman masks, hummingbirds, shrunken heads, jaguars) these poems at once ward off and redeem the father through myriad transformations. These intense, vibrant and fiercely felt poems are sure to evoke strong responses in readers.

To purchase a copy of The Zoo Father from gwales.com, please click on the book cover. 



The Huntress (Seren, 2005)

The HuntressIn this emotional follow-up to the highly acclaimed The Zoo Father, a daughter is haunted by her mentally ill mother, and a painful childhood is re-imagined through a series of remarkable and passionate transformations. The feared mother is a rattlesnake, an Aztec goddess,a Tibetan singing bowl, a stalagmite, a praying mantis, a ghost orchid. She is also seen as a nine-year-old child in a lunatic asylum. These culminate in a long central poem ’At the Gate of Secrets’ where the daughter escapes her huntress as a cosmic stag: "Every second I rise back up / to run deeper into the forest, / through the root-doors / and light-rings of night, / away from your arrows, my huntress." Underlying these poems is an intense mystical vision that lifts the dark material of the subject matter above the merely personal.

To purchase The Huntress from gwales.com, please click on the book cover.