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Christopher ReidChristopher Reid
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BiographyChristopher Reid was born in Hong Kong in 1949, educated in England, and studied at Oxford University from 1968-1971. He then worked as a freelance journalist and as book review editor of Crafts magazine. He won an Eric Gregory Award for his poetry in 1978. A year later his first poetry collection, Arcadia (1979) was published, winning the 1980 Somerset Maugham Award and the Hawthornden Prize. This has been followed by Pea Soup (1982); Katerina Brac (1985); In The Echoey Tunnel (1991); Expanded Universes (1996); For and After (2002) and Mr Mouth (2005). A selection of his poems was published in the US as Mermaids Explained (2001). He is often cited as co-founder with Craig Raine of the 'Martian School' of poetry which employs exotic and humorous metaphors to defamiliarize everyday experiences and objects. He has also written two books of poetry for children: All Sorts (1999) and Alphabicycle Order (2001).
He is the editor of two Faber and Faber collections: Sounds Good: 101 Poems to be Heard (1998) and Not to Speak of the Dog: 101 Short Stories in Verse (2000).
Christopher Reid has also published illustrations in Punch and London Magazine, worked as Poetry Editor at Faber and Faber for eight years, and runs his own independent publishing house, Ondt & Gracehoper. He received a Cholmondeley Award in 1995, the 2000 Signal Poetry Award for his children's collection All Sorts, and is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.
He currently teaches at the University of Hull. In 2007, he edited The Selected Letters of Ted Hughes for Faber and Faber.
His latest collections are The Song of Lunch (2009), and A Scattering (2009), in memory of his late wife, Lucinda. A Scattering was shortlisted for the 2009 Forward Poetry Prize (Best Poetry Collection of the Year) and the 2009 T. S. Eliot Prize, and won the 2009 Costa Book of the Year.    
  Genres (in alphabetical order)Poetry     BibliographyArcadia Oxford University Press, 1979 Pea Soup Oxford University Press, 1982 Katerina Brac Faber and Faber, 1985 The Poetry Book Society Anthology 1989-1990 (editor and introduction) Hutchinson, 1989 Sounds Good: 101 Poems to be Heard (editor) Faber and Faber, 1990 In the Echoey Tunnel Faber and Faber, 1991 Universes Ondt & Gracehoper, 1994 Expanded Universes Faber and Faber, 1996 Two Dogs on a Pub Roof (illustrated by Bryan Illsley) Prospero Poets, 1996 The May Anthology of Oxford and Cambridge Poetry 1997 (selection and introduction) Varsity, 1997 All Sorts (illustrated by Sara Fanelli) Ondt & Gracehoper, 1999 Not to Speak of the Dog: 101 Short Stories in Verse (editor) Faber and Faber, 2000 Alphabicycle Order (illustrated by Sara Fanelli) Ondt & Gracehoper, 2001 Mermaids Explained Harcourt (US), 2001 For and After Faber and Faber, 2003 Mr Mouth Ondt & Gracehoper, 2005 Selected Letters of Ted Hughes (editor) Faber and Faber, 2007 A Scattering Arete, 2009 A Scattering Arete, 2009 The Song of Lunch CB editions, 2009  
  Prizes and awards1978 Eric Gregory Award 1980 Hawthornden Prize Arcadia 1980 Prudence Farmer Award (joint winner - 'A Martian Sends a Postcard Home') 1980 Somerset Maugham Award Arcadia 1995 Cholmondeley Award 2000 Signal Poetry Award All Sorts 2003 T. S. Eliot Prize (shortlist) For and After 2009 Costa Book of the Year A Scattering 2009 Forward Poetry Prize (Best Poetry Collection of the Year) (shortlist) A Scattering 2009 T. S. Eliot Prize (shortlist) A Scattering    
  Critical PerspectiveChristopher Reid is perhaps still most often associated with the so-called ‘Martian School’ of poetry during the 1980s, due to his friendship with Craig Raine and their dandyish, witty style, transforming the everyday with strange similes and viewpoints. Indeed, when Reid won the Hawthornden Prize for his first collection, Arcadia (1979), the critic Bernard Bergonzi called him ‘a poet who combines exact observation with a rich and startling power of metaphor’. Since then, Reid’s work has shown considerable development. He has used ‘sham’ personae to great effect, notably in Katerina Brac (1985), his ‘translations’ of a fictional Eastern European woman poet. One side of his work is enchanted by foreign poetry. The other side at times strikes a whimsically Betjeman-esque note, usually in neatly rhymed stanzas, by turns celebratory or satirical about Britishness. His work has retained its penchant for verbal play, irony and visual description, yet has also gained in humanity. Introducing his most recent collection, For and After (2003), in the Poetry Book Society Bulletin, Reid modestly described the contents as ‘evidence of the poet’s usual, provisional negotiations with untidy life’.
Succeeding Raine as poetry editor of Faber and Faber, Reid thereby exercised considerable influence in the publishing world throughout much of the 1990s. Reid subsequently founded his own press with his wife, Ondt & Gracehopper, which has published his poetry books for children, notably All Sorts (1999), winner of that year’s Signal Poetry Award. He helped steer Faber in a populist direction with his anthologies Sounds Good: 101 Poems to be Heard (1990), and Not to Speak of the Dog: 101 Short Stories in Verse (2000). In the latter, there is a storytelling structure with themes linking one poem to the next. Thus, the tale of a child on the moors in Wordsworth’s ‘Lucy Gray’ is followed by Carol Ann Duffy’s rather different depiction of another lost child in ‘Stafford Afternoons’. The contents range widely historically, to include classic poems about ghosts, love, comedy, war and lost innocence, and much besides, such as the shaggy dog story of Louis MacNeice’s ‘The Taxis’.
Reid has explained the title For and After (2003) as simply that it mostly contains poems with dedications (‘for’) as well as translations or versions (‘after’). The dedicatees include poet friends Seamus Heaney (‘Palace Floor’), Christopher Logue (‘The Sirens’), and Katherine Pierpoint: ‘While the porcupine / will stab and sting you, / the pickupine / simply wants to bring you / a handy set / of those sharp little sticks’ (‘The Pickupine’). Another quirky animal is ‘The Phone-Fox’: ‘We were talking about Ted Hughes, / when the corner of my eye / twitched to the fact of a fox’. Reid’s peculiar vision leads to some exotic places, such as ‘Bermudapest’ and ‘A City that Marco Polo Missed’. Perhaps most alarming, however, is the Middle England county of ‘Bollockshire’, where all place-names begin with B: ‘So keep driving …. just when you least expect, / there’s Blokeston FC, home of ‘The Blockers’, / and Blokeston Prison, by the same no-frills architect’.
The most delightful poems are a sequence of ‘French Kisses’, versions of poems by Gautier, Verlaine and Hugo. In ‘The Ghost of the Rose’, a flower addresses the young woman who took it to yesterday’s ball (‘my tomb being your breast’). ‘Romance without Words’, asks a ‘sweet, teasing air’ ‘What was it you wanted, hovering and dithering here’. And ‘The Ladybird’ describes another pair of uncertain lovers, transfixed by the sight of an insect on a woman’s neck: ‘Her lips were right there; / I leant, too, and captured / that ladybird, / while the kiss flew off into thin air’. Christopher Reid had once observed that, ‘a lot of my poems deal with … unjustifiable moments of happiness’ [Poetry Review, September 1982]. There is a beautiful example of this, to conclude the book, in an elegy for the poet and critic Ian Hamilton. The writer’s task of ‘wrenching words / for rhymes’ becomes transformed, by hearing ‘two never-repetitive blackbirds’, who are ‘doing their free-jazz thing with the other birds’ (‘Lines’).
Dr Jules Smith, 2006
 
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