Jackie Kay's new collection is a lyric counterpart to her memoir,
Red Dust Road, the extraordinary story of the search for her Nigerian and Highland birth-parents; but it is also a moving book in its own right, and a deep enquiry into all forms of human friendship. Fiere - Scots for 'companion, friend, equal' - is a vivid description of the many paths our lives take, and of how those journeys are made meaningful by our companions on the road: lovers, friends, parents, children, mentors - as well as all the remarkable and chance acquaintances we would not otherwise have made. Written with Kay's trademark wit and flair, and infused with both Scots and Igbo speech, it is also a fascinating account of the formation of a self-identity - and the discovery of a tongue that best honours it. Musical and moving, funny and profound,
Fiere is Jackie Kay's most accomplished, assured and ambitious collection of poems to date.
About the AuthorJACKIE KAY was born in Edinburgh. She is a poet, playwright, novelist and writer of short stories and has enjoyed great acclaim for her work for both adults and children. Her novel
Trumpet won the
Guardian Fiction Prize, and she has published two further collections of stories with Picador,
Why Don't You Stop Talking? and
Wish I Was Here. She lives in Manchester.
AwardsShort-listed for Costa Poetry Award 2012 (UK).
Book InformationISBN 9780330513371
Author Jackie KayFormat Paperback
Page Count 80
Imprint PicadorPublisher Pan Macmillan
Weight(grams) 64g
Dimensions(mm) 196mm * 128mm * 6mm