Andrew McMillan online book launch with Malika Booker

Sarah-Clare Conlon, Literature Editor
Andrew McMillan. Photo Urszula Soltys
Poet Andrew McMillan. Photo by Ursula Soltys.

26 May 2021 Entrance is free — Visit now

Andrew McMillan’s third collection, pandemonium, is out with Jonathan Cape on 20 May, and this online event will see him reading from it and having an in-depth chat about it with his colleague in the Manchester Writing School, Forward Prize-winning Malika Booker. Co-hosted by Manchester Poetry Library, the book launch will also feature an introduction by the brand-new venue’s director, Becky Swain, along with an audience Q&A.

Less about physical union and completeness, and more about fracture and distance, the collection has already been named one of the picks of the year in the Guardian.

Andrew McMillan’s debut, physical (Cape, 2015), was the first poetry collection to win the Guardian First Book Award and it went on to win many other prizes (the Fenton Aldeburgh First Collection Prize, a Somerset Maugham Award, an Eric Gregory Award and a Northern Writers’ Award) and was voted one of the top 25 poetry books of the past 25 years by the Booksellers Association.

His second collection, playtime (Cape, 2018), won the inaugural Polari Prize and was a Poetry Book Society Recommendation for autumn 2018, a Poetry Book of the Month in both The Observer and The Telegraph, and a Poetry Book of the Year in The Sunday Times. Alan Bennett called it “vivid, accessible and honest, sometimes uncomfortably so” in the London Review of Books, while The Times said: “playtime’s meat and drink is the candid memoir poem, told with courage, invention and charm.”

While both these collections examined the intimacies and intricacies of the physical body, offering up unflinchingly frank depictions of the body and sexual love, the new book marks a change of tack from the senior lecturer in creative writing at the Manchester Writing School at Manchester Metropolitan University, looking inward, into the difficult world of mental health, and also outwards into the natural and political world.

Addressing a period of acute depression, the new poems have been described as “raw dispatches from a mind in freefall, a body in trouble” and “tender, savagely moving poems which stare, unblinkingly, into the sudden havoc and hurt of this world, searching for – and finally finding – some redemption”. Less about physical union and completeness, and more about fracture and distance, the collection has already been named one of the picks of the year in the Guardian, Financial Times and Irish Times Culture.

The publisher elaborates: “Keeping his trademark breath-space and lower-case lines, but more formally experimental, incorporating sequences and sonnets, the poems in pandemonium explore the fragility and depth of the human mind – in its panic and its troubled retreat – and map this turmoil onto the chaos and abundance of the garden. Depression is mirrored in the invasive, seemingly untreatable knotweed that slowly suffocates the garden, while the sky conspires in its sudden, terrifying clarity, ‘as though the root of the world were ripped clean off’.”

Andrew will be discussing the new themes and approaches to his work with Malika Booker, who won last year’s Forward Prize for Best Single Poem for ‘The Little Miracles’. Theatre-maker, multi-disciplinary artist and co-founder (with Roger Robinson) of international writing collective Malika’s Poetry Kitchen, Malika’s first collection of poetry, Pepper Seed, was published by Peepal Tree Press in 2013 and in 2019 she was awarded a prestigious Society of Authors Cholmondley Award for her contribution to poetry. The same year, she joined Manchester Metropolitan University as a lecturer in creative writing and she is chair of judges for the prestigious international Manchester Poetry Prize.

Andrew McMillan pandemonium cover
Andrew McMillan pandemonium cover

 

26 May 2021 Entrance is free Visit now

Where to go near Andrew McMillan online book launch with Malika Booker

Church congregation at St George's Church in Leeds
Leeds
Place of worship
St George’s Church

St George’s is a lively city centre church in Leeds with three services every Sunday and a midweek programme that includes groups, courses and events. We’re here to help people

Picante
Liverpool
Restaurant
Picante

Picante is a sun-soaked Mexican restaurant at the trailblazing Cains Brewery Village in Liverpool.

Miru Mill
Manchester
Event venue
Miru Mill

Miru Mill is an event space and micro-factory based at Churchgate Mill in Stockport.

Spa
iglu sauna

An authentic and affordable sauna and cold plunge experience in Hebden Bridge, in a beautiful outdoor setting amongst the trees. Book a regular session for £12 per person, or find…

Salford
Restaurant
Kallos Cafe & Wine Bar

Kallos is a Greek restaurant and wine bar in Salford, serving up exquisite dishes throughout the day and evening.

Symmetry Room
City Centre
Museum
Museum of Illusions

Museum of Illusions Manchester is part of the global Museum of Illusions Group, the largest and fastest-growing chain of private museums in the world.

Tropical World logo
Leeds
Tourist Attraction
Tropical World

At Tropical World, families can enjoy a fun-filled and educational day out. Start your epic journey in the Butterfly House, where exotic butterflies fly freely through our swampy mangrove, fluttering

Manchester
Restaurant
Soap Street Pizza

Based at Nordie in Levenshulme, Soap Street Pizza put out the perfect pie: crispy base and inspired toppings.

What's on: Literature

Okechukwu Nzelu
LiteratureHuddersfield
Polari at Huddersfield Literature Festival

Huddersfield Literature Festival is back with a packed programme this May, and this Polari-themed special caught our eye, featuring writers including Okechukwu Nzelu and Rosie Garland.

from £10.00

Culture Guides

portrait of Lorsung in a dark shirt with dark hair and dark round glasses
Literature Events in the North

We've got laughs and we've got leftfield on the live literature radar this month. Something for everyone, from poets playing with form to short story writers looking long.

Sextile
Music in the North

Open air clubs, new festivals and long-awaited gigs. The North West's live music scene is heating up this spring. 

Theatre in Manchester and the North
Theatre in the North

Eclectic as ever. You'll find inventive reworkings, world-class contemporary dance and Greater Manchester's inaugural Improv Festival in our guide.

Classical Music in the North

Read our latest highlights from the live classical music offer in Manchester and the North, taking in a number of the region's most cherished orchestral forces and venues.

Laura Ellen Bacon, Into Being, 2025. Photo © India Hobson, courtesy Yorkshire Sculpture Park
Exhibitions in the North

Willow weaving, textile collages, digital arts and ecology - all this and more in our exhibition top picks this month

Three men sit next to each other. One's head is bandaged, one holds a torch and one wears a sleepmask.
Cinema in the North

Live scores, midnight movies and the latest from Wes Anderson are just some of our upcoming film highlights.