The Safe House
The Safe House has been a long time in the making. The book almost feels
like a Selected Poems from the past ten years, what with my prison poems
included as a section, and the river poems having a 'chapter' too. There's
lots of new work here as well, poems written in the last five years that appear
here for the first time. I think the book feels organised, in the sense that
themes return from section to section. The main focus I had when I was collating
these poems is reflected in the title itself, The Safe House: the book is, in one
respect, about the idea of home, or different views of home. I don't want to say
too much else about the work as it's for the reader now and not me and I am just
another reader too. Here is part of the first review of The Safe House by Matt Simpson
in the on-line poetry magazine Stride.
Matt Simpson writes:
'Jones is good in love poems and writing about domestic intimacies:
these are done in a warmly delicate way. His poems arising out of experience of a writing
residency in a prison are honest, moving, humane; his poems about places and travelling
are engaging, turning, like his work generally, the familiar into something rich and new.'
See
'Four first-time full collections - new Salt and Shoestring titles, for the full
review.
Andy Croft, in Morning Star Online writes:
'Safe Houses (Shoestring £8.95) is Chris
Jones's first full-length collection. A third of the
book is devoted to a stunning sequence about the River Don in Sheffield, where he lives.'
See
21st Century Verse, for the full review.
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