Poet
Sinéad Morrissey
Sinéad Morrissey
(Ireland, 1972)
© Carcanet
Biography
Historically attuned and touchingly personal, imaginatively wide-ranging and linguistically precise, Sinéad Morrissey’s poetry is as many-angled and perceptive as the title of her fifth collection, Parallax (2013), suggests. Winner of the prestigious T. S. Eliot Prize, the collection embodies many of the qualities of her writing to date. Rooted in our everyday experiences yet often provocatively eerie, philosophically engaged yet also spiritual, Morrissey’s poems harbour a strong sense of her Northern Irish identity – from the sectarian violence of a Troubles-era childhood, to Belfast as a bustling modern-day city – while also ranging to international locations, including Japan, New Zealand and China.
Throughout her varied oeuvre, multiple perspectives and visual objects – paintings, maps, films and photos – abound, triggering reflections on the slippery nature of perception and truth, in art as much as in life. But it is the nightmarish vision of a poem such as ‘Through the Square Window’, an anxiety dream about the poet’s newborn son and a vision of the dead ‘arrived / to wash the windows of my house’, that perhaps best exemplifies Morrissey’s work. Through a deft combination of realism and imaginative panache, this poet’s shifting viewpoint brings past, present and future into an always productive tension.
© Ben Wilkinson
Bibliography
Poetry
There Was Fire in Vancouver, Carcanet, Manchester, 1996
Between Here and There, Carcanet, Manchester, 2002
The State of the Prisons, Carcanet, Manchester, 2005
Through the Square Window, Carcanet, Manchester, 2009
Parallax, Carcanet, Manchester, 2013
Selected awards
Patrick Kavanagh Award (1990)
Eric Gregory Award (1996)
Michael Hartnett Award for Poetry (2005)
National Poetry Competition (2007)
Irish Times Poetry Now Award (2010)
T. S. Eliot Prize (2013)
Links
Sinead Morrissey’s profile in The Poetry Archive
Poems
Poems of Sinéad Morrissey
Sponsors
Partners
LantarenVenster – Verhalenhuis Belvédère