Verity Spott

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Verity Spott
Verity Spott bei Fokus Lyrik 01.jpg
Verity Spott at the closing event of Fokus Lyrik 2019
Born1987 (age 3637)
Nationality British
Education University of Sussex
OccupationPoet

Verity Spott (born in 1987) is an English neo-modernist poet. Spott was born and raised in the central region of England, and moved to Brighton in 2006. [1] Since then Spott has been teaching poetry in local institutions, as well as co-running a monthly poetry and musical performance event called "Horseplay". [2]

Contents

Spott is an alumnus of the University of Sussex. [3]

Reception

Spott's work has been described in the New York Times as, "mesmerizing, oneiric, enchanted, with language that surprises". [2] An analysis of their poetry in the Chicago Review alludes to critical correlations between political situations and escapism, calling in to question the "very binaries of political engagement and escapist withdrawal, the idea that hope is the foundation for action...and the relationship between imagined actions and real ones." [4] Spott's work has been discussed in the Cordite Poetry Review, [5] and critiqued in the book, Wound Building: Dispatches from the Latest Disasters in UK Poetry, [6] among other publications. One of Spott's poems, "from Coronelles – Set 2", is included in 100 Queer Poems, which The Guardian described as 2022's "most notable anthology". [7]

Selected works

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References

  1. "Verity Spott". Cordite Poetry Review. Retrieved 14 May 2023.
  2. 1 2 Spott, Verity; Boyer, Anne (13 April 2023). "Poem: On Jasmine". The New York Times. ISSN   0362-4331 . Retrieved 14 May 2023.
  3. Cowie, Robyn (20 March 2021). "Interview: Verity Spott". The Badger. Retrieved 14 May 2023.
  4. Soong, Jennifer (10 February 2023). "Escapist Poetry". Chicago Review. Retrieved 15 May 2023.
  5. Thiessen, Charlotte; Spott, Verity; Spott, Joel (1 May 2020). "A Discussion on Verity Spott with 6 Poems". Cordite Poetry Review.
  6. Hayward, Danny (2021). Wound Building: Dispatches from the Latest Disasters in UK Poetry. Punctum Books. ISBN   978-1-68571-000-2 . Retrieved 15 May 2023.
  7. Dastidar, Rishi (3 December 2022). "The best poetry books of 2022". The Guardian. Retrieved 15 May 2023.
  8. Freeman, Lucy (1 June 2018). "A 'Beautiful half hour of being a mere woman': The Feminist Subject and Temporary Solidarity". Historical Materialism . 26 (2): 225–226 via Academic Search Complete.
  9. Carbery, Matthew James (13 December 2016). "Contemporary Poetry: Thinking and Feeling". Journal of British and Irish Innovative Poetry. 8 (1): 12. doi: 10.16995/biip.31 .