Cosmos Mariner
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About the Book:
So that’s what poets are: word-peckers, rhyming jackdaws of the world,
Beachcombers turning flotsam (with a sailor’s luck) to pearls.
The poems in Mike Harding’s sixth poetry collection, Cosmos Mariner, explore both what poetry means and what it means to be a poet. There is a dark undertone to his work here which in many cases reflects the current distracted political times. Longer poems such as ‘King Cotton’ and ‘A Murano Dagger’ go deeper and question received wisdoms. Against this, gentler poems such as ‘The Cleggan Sonnets’ and ‘The Curve of Love’ show Harding’s gift for capturing epiphanies and fixing them with a piercing simplicity that remains burned in the memory.
About the Authors:
MIKE HARDING is well known as a stand-up comedian, playwright, poet, broadcaster and documentary maker. He first came to Ireland as a teenager when he hitched around the country heading ultimately for County Galway and the Aran Islands.
Instilled with a love of the country by his Irish-Catholic family in Manchester, his love of Ireland was further deepened by one of his teachers at St Bede’s College, Manchester – Father Augustus Reynolds. Under his guidance the poetry of Yeats and the plays and writings of J. M Synge took the young poet by the scruff of the neck and sent him reeling onto the Liverpool boat standing with a sunburned thumb at the side of the long road west.
Over the following years he returned to Ireland many times, cycling and walking, playing his banjo in sessions and writing; one result of his wanderings was the acclaimed travel and walking book Footloose in the West of Ireland (Pub. Michael Joseph).
While working for the BBC on a feature programme on Irish folk singer Dolores Keane, Mike Harding found himself in Clifden and in an estate agent’s window found what would become his Irish home, a traditional cottage that had lain empty for almost twenty years with a rotted corrugated iron roof and neither doors nor windows. The view out over Cleggan Bay however was stunning.
Two years of hard work turned it back into a home and it was in that home, while looking out over Clegan Bay that much of his latest book of poems The Connemara Cantos was written. Not all of these poems are about Connemara, they are also about Irish immigrants on building sites in Manchester, pubs in London and the beauty of Irish traditional music; but all the poems in this book were either written in or inspired by the very special place that is Connemara – not a county, not a political entity but perhaps something much wider – a state of the soul.