Born in Skipton, Yorkshire, Blake Morrison is the author of bestselling memoirs, And When Did You Last See Your Father? (winner of the J.R. Ackerley Prize for Autobiography and the Esquire Award for Non-Fiction) and Things My Mother Never Told Me. His poetry collections include Dark Glasses, which won the Dylan Thomas and Somerset Maugham prizes, Pendle Witches, which was illustrated by Paula Rego, and Shingle Street. He is also a novelist, critic, journalist and librettist. He lives in South London.
'Blake Morrison’s poems move with unforced grace between grief and illumination, discovering time and again the luminous in the everyday: the light that spills from a canoeist’s oars, the ""feather-veins and spider-threads"" of a wild fennel leaf… Following the gentle cadence of these poems we are led ""bare-foot, soft-foot, lightsome as air"" through a terrain of sharp-eyed domestic vignettes, a powerful sonnet sequence addressed to the poet’s late sister and deft refractions of Elizabeth Bishop’s prose. Plain-speaking, intensely humane, and musical, Afterburn distils the insights of a seasoned memoirist into images that linger long after the final page' * Julia Copus * 'It isn’t often you pick up a new book of poems without a shadow of literary anxiety hanging over your head. Morrison finds the subtlest feelings in the simplest of material, never the other way round. A master of the sonnet, he is never afraid of starting a poem, then pausing to let the subject matter tell him the rest of it. Every poem seems to be a spontaneous adventure into the unknown-till-now – ours, not his. One about different coloured marital teacups hanging on hooks actually made me cry. I’m taking Afterburn to my desert island' * Hugo Williams *