Taking Flight

A Collection

Aileen Ballantyne

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Binding: Paperback

ISBN 9781913025410

Aboout the Book:

They flew for love, 
flew
for something that was new,
then flew again, to
go home

Taking Flight, the first poetry collection from journalist turned poet Aileen Ballantyne, takes you on a journey through time and place. From the 1969 Moon Landings to the Lockerbie disaster and beyond, these poems are the personal stories of people who will be remembered long after the headlines are history. An astronaut tracing his daughter’s name in the sands of the Moon; a time-travelling magician from the Qin Dynasty; a young policeman working amidst the Lockerbie disaster; a soldier/mother making war remotely every day from her home in Nevada – these people are pulled to the present in Ballantyne’s poems, some literal, some lyrical and all heartbreakingly real.

Reviews: 

Aileen Ballantyne has a rare and natural gift for language. Whether it’s personal, metaphorical or historical, her narratives tell us things we really need to know, and that’s what poetry is all about. JOHN GLENDAY

Aileen Ballantyne’s debut collection is remarkable for its breadth of subject, poems that stretch from Stevenson to Nansen, from the affecting intuition that an ageing astronaut, back on Earth, feels ‘the thud of re-entry’ of new missions and hears his spine ‘clicking, remembering its lightness’, to precisely rendered long-tailed bats of 1942 set to deliver bombs fixed to their chests with bulldog clips. In the particularity of detail and in the depth of preoccupation, this collection, centred on remarkable and unremarkable human experience, has the texture of satisfying biography. JANE McKIE

The poems are compelling. Read this book… I’m particularly moved by the sequence of poems about the Pan Am flight that fell on Lockerbie. JAY WHITTAKER, author of Wristwatch (Saltire Scottish Poetry Book of the Year 2018)

About the Author:

AILEEN BALLANTYNE is a national newspaper journalist turned poet. She was the staff Medical Correspondent for The Guardian and The Sunday Times. Her journalism has twice been commended at the British Press Awards and her news features on aids in The Sunday Times won the David Boyle (Erskine Hospital) Memorial Award at the Scottish Press Awards.

Aileen recently completed a phd in Creative Writing and Modern Poetry at the University of Edinburgh, where she now teaches an undergraduate course on Contemporary Poetry. In 2015, she won first prize in the Mslexia Poetry Competition for her poem on the Lockerbie disaster and the short poem category at the Poetry on the Lake Festival in Orta San Giulio, Italy. She is also a recent winner of the Scots category of the Wigtown Poetry Prize (2012). In 2018, she received the prestigious Scottish Book Trust New Writers’ Award.

Taking Flight is her first poetry collection..