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Angela
Greene's poetry speaks eloquently of the coming into being,
flourishing and passing away of quiet worlds: the underlying movement
of life, which is so often taken for granted. These are poems
of deeply lived experience. They delve into the nature of things,
roots physical and metaphysical, exposing the heart.
"...Hers
is an eye that sees, not as if for the first time, but for the
hundredth, and still sees afresh..." Hugh Bredin,
Fortnight
About the
Author
Poet and painter
Angela Greene was born in England in 1936 and lived from early
childhood in Dublin. She was educated at Dominican College, Eccles
Street and trained as a nurse at the Mater Hospital, Dublin. In
1988 she won the Patrick Kavanagh Award and in 1989 was
short-listed for The Sunday Tribune/ Hennessy Literary Award.
In 1987 she was a prizewinner in the Bloodaxe Books National
Poetry Competition. Her poetry was published in Britain
and Ireland, read on RTE Radio and BBC Radio Ulster and was performed
in Sunny Side Plucked at the Project Arts Centre, Dublin.
Her deeply lived experience as woman, daughter, wife, mother,
poet and painter is reflected in quiet, well-crafted and moving
poems. The lateness of her arrival to contemporary Irish poetry
and the quiet way she received her well deserved recognition,
makes her loss, in 1997, all the more poignant.
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