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Wendy CopeWendy Cope
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BiographyPoet Wendy Cope was born in Erith, Kent in 1945 and read History at St Hilda's College, Oxford. She trained as a teacher at Westminster College of Education, Oxford, and taught in primary schools in London (1967-81 and 1984-6). She became Arts and Reviews editor for Contact, the Inner London Education Authority magazine, and continued to teach part-time, before becoming a freelance writer in 1986. She was television critic for The Spectator magazine until 1990.
Her latest book, Two Cures for Love (2008) is a selection of previous poems with notes, together with new poems.    
  Genres (in alphabetical order)Children, Poetry     BibliographyAcross the City Priapus Press (limited edition), 1980 Hope and the 42 Other Branch Readings, 1984 Making Cocoa for Kingsley Amis Faber and Faber, 1986 Poem from a Colour Chart of House Paints (limited edition) Priapus Press, 1986 Does She Like Word Games? Anvil Press Poetry, 1988 Men and Their Boring Arguments Wykeham, 1988 Twiddling Your Thumbs Faber and Faber, 1988 Is That the New Moon? (editor) HarperCollins, 1989 The River Girl Faber and Faber, 1991 Serious Concerns Faber and Faber, 1992 The Faber Book of Drink, Drinkers and Drinking (contributor) Faber and Faber, 1993 The Orchard Book of Funny Poems (editor) Orchard, 1993 The Squirrel and the Crow Prospero Poets, 1994 Poems 1 (contributor) Addison Wesley Longman, 1995 Another Day on Your Foot and I Would Have Died (contributor) Macmillan, 1996 Casting a Spell (contributor) Faber and Faber, 1996 Marigolds Grow Wild on Platforms: An Anthology of Railway Poetry (contributor) Ward Lock, 1996 Over the Moon: Championship Football Poems (contributor) Red Fox, 1996 A Draft of XXX Cantos (contributor) Faber and Faber, 1997 Dear Future: A Time Capsule of Poems (contributor) Hodder & Stoughton, 1997 Evergreen Verse (contributor) Dent, 1997 For All Occasions (contributor) Methuen, 1997 Funnybones (contributor) CollinsEducational, 1998 Silly Bones (contributor) Scholastic, 1998 The Funny Side: 101 Humorous Poems (editor) Faber and Faber, 1998 The Epic Poise: A Celebration of Ted Hughes (contributor) Faber and Faber, 1999 The Faber Book of Bedtime Stories (editor) Faber and Faber, 1999 Big Orchard Book of Funny Poems (editor) Orchard, 2000 Heaven on Earth: 101 Happy Poems (editor) Faber and Faber, 2001 If I Don't Know Faber and Faber, 2001 Is That The New Moon?: Poems by Women Poets (selector) Collins, 2002 George Herbert: Verse and Prose (selector and introduction) SPCK, 2003 Two Cures for Love Faber and Faber, 2008  
  Prizes and awards1987 Cholmondeley Award 1995 Michael Braude Award for Light Verse (American Academy of Arts and Letters) 2001 Whitbread Poetry Award (shortlist) If I Don't Know    
  Critical PerspectiveWendy Cope’s poetry is perhaps best known for its humour and wit. The joke has often been centred on men from the point of view of the single heterosexual woman, and this is most famously used in ‘Bloody Men’ (of Serious Concerns, 1992):
'Bloody men are like bloody buses –
As well as the lighter and more well-known examples, her work is also self-reflective in that it shows a concern for the writing process and for writing poetry in particular. This comes through in her parodies of the work of various poets. It is also expressed in poems such as ‘The Poet’s Song’ (which is also included in Serious Concerns), which jokily refers to the tension between earning a living as a poet and remaining faithful to one’s ideals. In terms of style and content, her work has remained largely accessible to the reading public and this is undoubtedly why it has been so relatively popular when compared with that of many other contemporary poets.
Her first collection, Making Cocoa for Kingsley Amis (1986), includes parodies of work by poets such as T. S. Eliot’s ‘The Waste Land’ (as in ‘Waste Land Limericks’):
'In April one seldom feels cheerful;
If one compares this with the first four lines of ‘The Waste Land’, it is possible to see the divergences and why the parody is effective:
'April is the cruellest month, breeding
The humour and knowingness is, at times, also offset with poignancy and this may be seen in ‘Tich Miller’ and ‘Lonely Hearts’. These two poems demonstrate an awareness of the outsider, which is in keeping with the undeclared premise of being accessible to a wider readership.
In this collection, Cope also draws on an alter ego for the Strugnell poems. Strugnell’s version of a poetic voice is used to mix the elevated with the everyday and the outcome is comic. Christopher Reid’s review for the London Review of Books (17 April 1986) explains how the use of this persona adds a further layer to the wit:
‘Making Cocoa for Kingsley Amis’ is the only poem in the third and final section. It takes up just four lines and captures the irreverent but familiar mood of the collection:
'It was a dream I had last week
The eponymous poem of her second collection, Serious Concerns, takes on the critics, specifically Robert O’Brien in this instance, who have regarded her humour as ‘both her strength and her limitation’ and questions this reasoning:
'Write to amuse? What an appalling suggestion!
In an interview with Thomas Sutcliffe, the point is raised how the levity in Cope’s work has been questioned by other poets too and she explains that this ‘battering’ is one reason why there is a gap of nine years between her second and third collection (The Independent 7 June 2001).
The seriousness of Serious Concerns predominates in the final section of the collection. ‘Legacy’, ‘Names’, ‘For My Sister, Emigrating’ and ‘Leaving’, for example, consider the theme of leaving or being left with a subdued tone. ‘Some More Light Verse’ of section one also depends on a note of desperation and borders on being nihilistic in places. All but two of the 20 lines list the way ‘you’ either attempts but fails at self-improvement, or tries to stave off the pointlessness of existence. The remaining two lines are a repetition of ‘And nothing works. The outlook’s grim’. By ending on the commandment ‘you have to try’, the pessimism is lightened a little and it remains an insightful poem that lists the ways members of a wealthy society have become lost in introspection.
In Kate Kellaway’s review of the third collection, If I Don’t Know (2001), she argues it is ‘constructed around helplessness in the face of beauty’ (The Observer, 3 June 2001). Sutcliffe points out uncritically that there is an aspect of happiness, contentment even, that has infiltrated this work and this has not been so evident in the previous two books. He cites ‘Being Boring’ to exemplify this (The Independent, 7 June 2001):
'And, now that I’ve found a safe mooring,
Two Cures For Love (2008) is a collection mainly of previously published poems, but includes extensive notes that give some contextual background and dates of when the poems were first written. It is explained here, for example, how ‘Waste Land Limericks’ was originally written as a fitting contribution for How to Become Ridiculously Well-Read in One Evening (1985), which contains condensed versions of literature.
Cope has also edited a number of collections such as Is That the New Moon? (1989). Her Introduction is useful for the perspective she gives of this collection and the general reception that poetry receives, compared with other forms of writing: ‘Most people can’t be bothered with poetry, least of all with contemporary poetry’. She also goes on to explain why this is a collection of work by all-female writers: ‘There’s something to be said for excluding men, now and again, in order to give women a chance to come into their own’ (1989).
This feminist impulse has been an understated component in all three of her collections. It demonstrates that beneath the humour lies a political engagement that refuses to be compliant with either the sentimental gesture or the expectations about what makes a serious poet.
Julie Ellam, 2009  
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