Shortlisted for the 2017 T S Eliot Prize In her fourth collection Leontia Flynn rehearses & resolves the concerns & forms of previous books beginning with a sequence written in the aftermath of her father's death from Alzheimer's disease & during the care of her daughter in infancy Moving on to explore the constructed nature of childhood via a long poem imagining her mother's experiences in Northern Ireland during the Troubles & in an elegy for Seamus Heaney the poems also seek to contrast the isolation & privacy of an experience of family life with increasingly pervasive & relentless digital technologies Drawing on a range of other voices & literary exemplars including a tradition of verse drama & dialogues & particularly Plath's Three Women' The Radio sees writing poems as a communication that begins with an act of interior listening for sounds & forms & to personal sources of meaning The Radio explores the pressure the interior life faces from both the usual"idian struggles & the new stridency & quick-fire certainties of virtual communication Showing her superb mastery of form Leontia Flynn's poems are fragile funny observant & engaging
- reminding us once again of her originality & importance