How To Burn A Woman

Claire Askew
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How To Burn A Woman

Claire Askew
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Found in: Arts & Letters, General Poetry

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Overview

96 PAGESENGLISH

Promotional Details
  • Published date: Jan 21, 2022
  • Language: English
  • No. of Pages: 96
  • Publisher: Bloodaxe
  • ISBN: 9781780375724
  • Dimensions: 5.5" W x 0.27" L x 8.5" H
Claire Askew was born in 1986 and grew up in the rural Scottish Borders. She has lived in Edinburgh since 2004, and holds a PhD in Creative Writing & Contemporary Women's Poetry from the University of Edinburgh. Her poems have appeared in numerous publications, including The Guardian, Poetry Scotland, PANK, The Edinburgh Review and Be The First To Like This: New Scottish Poetry (Vagabond Voices, 2014), and have been selected twice for the Scottish Poetry Library's Best Scottish Poems of the Year. In 2013 she won the International Salt Prize for Poetry, and in 2014 was runner-up for the inaugural Edwin Morgan Poetry Award for Scottish poets under 30 for an earlier version of her first book-length collection, This changes things, which was published by Bloodaxe in 2016. She was shortlisted for the Edwin Morgan Poetry Award for a second time in 2016. This changes things was also shortlisted for the Saltire Society First Book of the Year Award 2016, the Seamus Heaney Centre Prize for First Full Collection 2017 and the Michael Murphy Memorial Prize 2017. Claire has been a Scottish Book Trust Reading Champion (2016/7), a Jessie Kesson Fellow (2017) and the Writer in Residence at the University of Edinburgh (2017-2019). Also a novelist, her award-winning Edinburgh-based DI Birch series is published by Hodder & Stoughton. Her second full-length collection, How to burn a woman, is published by Bloodaxe in 2021.

'There's a great power in Claire's work, and there's a tremendous crafting of imagery. At the same time, her language is simple, but it's intense, and for me she obviously speaks to all generations, but she's a woman of her generation.' - Dr Anne Pia, poetry co-judge, Scottish Poetry Book of the Year (Scotland's National Book Awards)

'These poems are an elegy against forgetting.' - Layla Benitez-James, Harriet Reviews, Poetry Foundation

"In this book of spells, Askew stirs together smart, modern poems about whisky, heartbreak and male-female relationships with a darker sequence about our “foremothers” who were persecuted as witches. How to burn a woman is full of hard-won wisdom and beauty. The vibe is Kim Addonizio joins a coven." - Clare Pollard, poet

'It’s a stunning collection, full of tenderness, love, righteous indignation and wit.' The Scotsman

‘Written with assurance, these poems feel like the work of a poet who is at the top of her game. They arise out of Claire Askew’s deeply researched investigation of the deaths of women convicted and executed as witches, and she brings them back to life with compassion and well-justified fury…. This is important and profound poetry that reclaims the wisdom and strength of our forebears.’ - Mandy Haggith, Northwords Now

‘Since her first poetry collection This changes things was published in 2016, Askew has been busy establishing herself as a brilliant crime writer… and now returns to poetry with this searing collection of spells, power and love.’ - The Bookseller

‘Bloodaxe has just announced the exciting second collection from Dr Claire Askew, How to burn a woman. Through poems of witches and outsiders, of women who lived on the fringes of ordinary, Askew dives into an exploration of love with her incisive language, poetic tenderness and electric rage.’ - Beth Cochrane, The Skinny

‘Finding a conduit to her own re-definition of womanhood in the form of the embattled seventeenth century witch, Askew establishes a kind of archetype of suffering. Intersecting her narrative thread with poems of pain, recalcitrance, defiance and abject fear, her ‘testimonies’ are sometimes delivered in the voices of the lost, precisely as they act to reinforce her own sense of identification with their memory… Claire Askew’s collection is a vigorously honest prosecution of grievance, a needful resetting of cultural history, and a triumph of resilience.’ - Steve Whitaker, The Yorkshire Times

‘…a vital, powerful book that commemorates those persecuted for witchcraft over the centuries, along with reflections on being an outsider, on love in its myriad forms, on smiles that cut like knives, and the loneliness of the Loch Ness Monster.’ – Nicola Meighan, introducing How to burn a woman on The Afternoon Show, BBC Radio Scotland

‘World Poetry Day brought the chance to read the latest Scottish Poetry Book of the Year, How to burn a woman by Claire Askew… A trapped Nessie speaks out in the first poem… More unsettling worlds, past and present, jostle out of the pages as the poet lifts you into Highland skies or to search a horror house, and casts a spell with a fiery parade of Scottish ‘witches’.’ The Inverness Courier

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