The Bone Folder by Cait O’Neill McCullagh
The Bone Folder is Cait O’Neill McCullagh’s debut collection of poetry which explores loss, war, illness, the fragility and durability of bone, and so much
The urge to explore and celebrate all the kinds of lives of Planet Earth is stronger than ever, but the environmental and ecological crisis demands we also lift our eyes, and our voices, to species extinction and habitat loss, to what is happening to the forests and hills, the rivers and seas, our streets and gardens. The writer’s instinct to pay attention has never been more vital. Literature can help us to see the natural world – and our place in it – differently.
The Bone Folder is Cait O’Neill McCullagh’s debut collection of poetry which explores loss, war, illness, the fragility and durability of bone, and so much
‘By walking an hour each morning,’ Cracknell writes, in the opening chapter of Doubling Back, ‘I plant myself here.’ The line captures an essence of
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Jamie’s latest collection, Cairn, refuses to be about any one thing. Hillsides, are graced with tormentil and turbines. A tanker carries oil through Glen Esk.