Sinéad Morrissey

Sinead Morrissey at the Durham Book Festival in 2015

Sinéad Morrissey (born 24 April[1] 1972 in Portadown, County Armagh) is an Northern Irish poet.[2][3] In January 2014 she won the T. S. Eliot Prize for her fifth collection Parallax.

Life

In my dream the dead have arrived
to wash the windows of my house.
There are no blinds to shut them out with.

The clouds above the Lough are stacked
like the clouds are stacked above Delft.
They have the glutted look of clouds over water.

The heads of the dead are huge. I wonder
if it’s my son they’re after, his
effortless breath, his ribbon of years ─

but he sleeps on unregarded in his cot,
inured, it would seem, quite naturally
to the sluicing and battering and pairing back of glass

that delivers this shining exterior …

excerpt from "Through the Square Window"[4]

Raised in Belfast, she was educated at Trinity College, Dublin, where she took BA and PhD degrees, and won the Patrick Kavanagh Poetry Award in 1990. She has published five collections of poetry: There Was Fire in Vancouver (1996), Between Here and There (2001), The State of the Prisons (2005), Through the Square Window (2009), and "Parallax" the second, third and fourth of which were shortlisted for the T. S. Eliot Prize. After periods living in Japan and New Zealand she now lives in Belfast, where she has been writer-in-residence at Queen's University, Belfast. In 2016 she was appointed Professor of Creative Writing at the University of Newcastle.

Her collection, The State of the Prisons, was shortlisted for the Poetry Now Award in 2006. The same collection won the Michael Hartnett Poetry Prize in 2005. In November 2007, she received a Lannan Foundation Fellowship for "distinctive literary merit and for demonstrating potential for continued outstanding work".[3] Her poem "Through the Square Window" won first prize in the 2007 British National Poetry Competition.[5] Her collection, Through the Square Window, won the Poetry Now Award for 2010.[6]

In January 2014 Morrissey won the T.S. Eliot Prize for her fifth collection Parallax.[2] The chair of the judging panel, Ian Duhig, remarked that the collection was 'politically, historically and personally ambitious, expressed in beautifully turned language, her book is as many-angled and any-angled as its title suggests.'[7]

Morrissey is married to Joseph Pond, an acupuncturist, and has two children.[8]

Works

See also

References

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