Northwords Now

New writing, fresh from Scotland and the wider North
Sgrìobhadh ùr à Alba agus an Àird a Tuath

editor@northwordsnow.co.uk Twitter Facebook Search

What's New in the North: May 2021

An informal readers’ group

by Kenny Taylor

Each issue, it’s hard to include reviews of all the titles we’d like to consider. In part, this is because we need to delay coverage of books received close to our own publication time. So we reckoned it could be fun for readers to get some early pointers to books that we know will be reviewed here in the next few months - some online and some in the next print edition.

You could think of it as a kind of Northwords Now readers’ group, where you can seek-out a title that you know will later be reviewed, and then see how your perceptions mesh with those of our review writers. To help you make some of selections for spring and summer, here’s a small list of some very new titles we know will feature (many others will also be reviewed in the autumn issue):

 ‘Of Stone and Sky’ (Polygon) is a novel by Merryn Glover, zoom-launched this May through Grantown’s impressive independent bookshop ‘The Bookmark.’ It’s a tale set in the Cairngorms, with the disappearance of a shepherd, Colvin Munro, at its heart and the gradual finding of twelve of his possessions threading through it to reveal much wider connections.

‘A Bard’s Life’ (Rymour Books) by prolific champion of north-east Scots, Sheena Blackhall, is an autobiographical sequence of poems, stories and photographs, including work in both Doric and English.

‘The Stone Age’ (Picador Poetry) a new collection by T.S. Eliot and Edwin Morgan prizewinner, Jen Hadfield, is deep-rooted in the landscape of her Shetland home.

‘Larksong Static’ (Hedgehog Press) holds poems from 2005-2020 selected from his several collections and pamphlets by Gardenstown poet, Martin Malone.

‘The Snow and the Works on the Northern Line’ (Sandstone Press) by Ruth Thomas is a novel about things lost and found and about love, grief and forgiveness: letting go and moving on.
Ceud taing, Rody!
Rody Gorman’s involvement with the lineage of this publication stretches back to the old Northwords in early part of the new millennium. He became Gaelic Editor of Northwords Now with Issue 15, in the summer of 2010 – when Chris Powici also moved into the editorial chair.

For the 27 issues from then onwards, Rody has encouraged and edited new work from a wide array of contemporary Gaelic writers. Since 2017, this has included the Gaelic supplement ‘Tuath’ as part of the spring-summer issue. Rody’s work to nurture new writing in both Scottish and Irish Gaelic is widely respected, including through editorship of the annual ‘An Guth’ anthology, his translations into and between Irish and Scottish Gaelic, teaching at Sabhal Mòr Ostaig UHI
and his own poetry, widely published and translated. Although he’s now stepping down as Gaelic Editor for Northwords Now, we look forward to publishing more of his poetry in future, and to continued advice – preferably over a dram some day on Skye, when social distancing becomes more relaxed. Airson a-nis, gach deagh dhùrachd, Rody, agus mòran taing airson a h-uile rud a rinn thu airson Northwords Now agus Tuath.

Cover image credit: Peter Davis, North Stole, Watercolour with chalk rubbing on paper, 2018

Northwords Now acknowledges the vital support of Creative Scotland and Bòrd na Gàidhlig.
ISSN 1750-7928 - Print Design by Gustaf Eriksson - Website by Plexus Media