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    Magnum Mysterium

    €13.75
    Irish American poet Julie O'Callaghan's first book since Tell Me This Is Normal: New & Selected Poems. Her new poems have evolved from early monologues, written in American demotic, to poems of heartache on the death of her husband, the poet Dennis O'Driscoll. But even in these harrowing poems she never loses her ear for absurdities of modern life.
    ISBN: 9781780375144
    AuthorO'Callaghan Julie
    Pub Date25/06/2020
    BindingPaperback
    Pages96
    AvailabilityCurrently out of stock. If available, delivery is usually 5-10 working days.
    Availability: Out of Stock

    Magnum Mysterium is Irish American poet Julie O'Callaghan's first collection since Tell Me This Is Normal: New & Selected Poems (2008).

    Her new poems have evolved from the early monologues - written in American demotic - to poems of heartache on the death of her husband, the poet Dennis O'Driscoll. But even in these harrowing poems she never loses her ear for the absurdities of modern life - including the grieving process where she can "see" her husband alive and doing what he loves ('Cyber You'):

    I need to see you
    living and breathing.
    I go to YouTube
    and there you are being you
    (the tiny you)
    with the tie I bought you
    for Christmas
    sitting on a chair
    on a stage in Santa Fe
    asking Seamus questions.
    Eternally.

    In Magnum Mysterium Julie O'Callaghan has continued writing poems which 'seem effortless and are immediately accessible and achieve great emotional weight by the lightest of means' (Michael Hartnett Award citation).

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    Magnum Mysterium is Irish American poet Julie O'Callaghan's first collection since Tell Me This Is Normal: New & Selected Poems (2008).

    Her new poems have evolved from the early monologues - written in American demotic - to poems of heartache on the death of her husband, the poet Dennis O'Driscoll. But even in these harrowing poems she never loses her ear for the absurdities of modern life - including the grieving process where she can "see" her husband alive and doing what he loves ('Cyber You'):

    I need to see you
    living and breathing.
    I go to YouTube
    and there you are being you
    (the tiny you)
    with the tie I bought you
    for Christmas
    sitting on a chair
    on a stage in Santa Fe
    asking Seamus questions.
    Eternally.

    In Magnum Mysterium Julie O'Callaghan has continued writing poems which 'seem effortless and are immediately accessible and achieve great emotional weight by the lightest of means' (Michael Hartnett Award citation).