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The best poetry books of 2025 so far

The best poetry books of 2025 so far

Telegraph31-01-2025
February: frank: sonnets and Modern Poetry by Diane Seuss
Alongside Terrance Hayes, Diane Seuss has a strong case to be considered as the most influential American poet of the last 10 years. A former social worker, over six collections she has become renowned for her fearless excavation of her life in her work. In conversation with poet Hanif Abdurraqib last year, she said of her process: 'Being in movement, being in the midst of everyday life, is my main jam… it counters loneliness to be able to hear my thoughts separate from my actions.' But nor does she want to 'interrupt the loneliness. I think for me it's essential to being able to write.'
It's an approach that has seen Seuss garlanded with awards. Her last collection, frank: sonnets, won the 2022 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry. This, and her newest book, Modern Poetry, now arrive in the UK thanks to the independent press
As the title hints, Frank O'Hara is the presiding spirit of frank. The book is also told with frankness; it's a vivid account of the past few decades of Seuss's life, from her upbringing in rural Michigan through to the
These are also very much sonnets. They might not look like their traditional Shakespearean or Petrarchan brethren, but in Seuss's 14 lines – 'one frame in a long strip / of celluloid' – you can see arguments being repeatedly probed, turns being made. High and low cultural references – one poem references
Modern Poetry gives readers more space to breathe. Inspired by a poetry textbook of the same name which she read as a child, it's a condensed history of Seuss's reading and learning and what this has given her – primarily, the armour to survive and live in a hostile world. Her reading is smartly selective: as she writes in 'My Education', 'I read most of Joseph Conrad, having figured out / that I could find some things repulsive and still / require them for my project. My project / was my life.'
At times it's as though you're eavesdropping on a particularly spiky seminar: it's invigorating to see her stripping away the pretension often associated with writing poetry. While the dominant mode in the book is free verse, Seuss is not above deploying her technique in ways that suggest something of an ars poetica. She opens 'Comma' with:
To never be touched again. That line
has a sound. Hear it?
I don't want to bring a story
to it. Not even an image.
It has a sound. Listen.
Part of Seuss's significance has been because she writes 'Of the
With her formidable voice, Seuss is one of the most important poets writing now. But that's a claim she would, no doubt, puncture and yet also agree with: 'I had no God-given authority. / I had to self-generate it, like God. / At some point, God had to take the leap / to become God.'
RD
Rishi Dastidar's most recent poetry collection is Neptune's Projects. Modern Poetry and frank: sonnets are published by Fitzcarraldo at £12.99 each. To order your copy, call 0330 173 0523 or visit
January: There Lives A Young Girl in Me Who Will Not Die by Tove Ditlevsen
'There lives a young girl in me who will not die,' writes
Ditlevsen died by suicide at the age of 58 in 1976. She was one of the most famous writers in Denmark, but only became well-known to Anglophone readers when the English translation of her celebrated Copenhagen Trilogy (1967-71) was
Ditlevsen, however, once wrote that she did much of her best work in poetry. There Lives a Young Girl in Me Who Will Not Die, the first English translation of those poems, starts with selections from A Girl's Mind, published in 1939 when she was 21, and ends with poems from To a Little Girl, published posthumously in 1978. Throughout, we see the development of a poetic voice, as she moves from traditional rhyme-schemes and forms into a greater level of enjambment and markedly shorter lines. Her images become more abstract. New motifs emerge. Divorce, for instance, appears late, yet it becomes one of her finest poetic subjects. Poems about anxiety and depression recur, as do those about wanting to be free of obligations. 'Loving badly,' as she calls it, is another great subject: wanting someone close then pushing them away. 'I often wish he would leave,' she laments, 'and so become / distinctly near.'
This recurrence of theme is no mere repetition: it's an ethos that defines Ditlevsen's oeuvre. She's never done with the complex dance between who she used to be and who she is now. The spectres of her childhood walk through this book: her mother, her father, the streets where they lived, a whole lost world that seems somehow still present. She's interested in writing about what is commonly called 'trauma' – how childhood wounds shape adulthood, and adults' struggles are passed down the generations – yet she manages to make this chain of exchange livelier, darker, and stranger than many discussions of trauma do.
In one poem, she describes the way she turned away from her mother, disgusted by her smell; her mother 'gave up once and for all / on the project of loving me'. Her own children then seem to turn away from her, as though she had taken on her mother's smell – and her son, now, is fond of his grandmother. 'Love often / skips a generation –' she writes, matter-of-fact; but that dash hangs like an open door, gesturing at the estrangement and heartbreak that might lie beyond.
'In childhood's long darkened night / burn little, flickering lanterns': so one early poem in this collection begins. That may be what Ditlevsen does best, emerging from childhood's coffin to and bringing these lanterns up close to the strange moments where past and present collide. Her poems read, at their best, like illuminations, transfiguring her life again and again.
SH
There Lives a Young Girl In Me Who Will Not Die is published by Penguin at £9.99. To order your copy, call 0330 173 0523 or visit
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That night he was upstairs and I was downstairs and suddenly he came down with just his undies on. "He goes 'We have got something to tell you?' I was like 'we?' and he said 'we have decided. I am going to have to kill you'. I was like 'alrighty then' and it was like whoosh. He got me on the ground and was strangling me. ‌ "On the coffee table we had an alarm and it went straight to the cops and it would ring really loud. I had it extra loud, as we were living in the country and often I was on my own, as there was nobody around. So I pressed the alarm and within two minutes the cops came. "I blacked out. All I kept thinking about was the kids. They handcuffed him and it is the usual alcoholic thing 'she is that'. When they took him away I had this weight lifted off me. "He got himself a lawyer and he said he would go into rehab for six months and the judge said he had to stay there for six months. It terrified me and the kids." ‌ Despite the attack, Sharon helped Ozzy battle his demons, saying: "I had nothing in my name, so if I wanted a divorce I would have nothing. "He then started to write long letters and I missed him. No matter what, I loved him, so what am I gonna do? When he came back he had been six months without booze or drugs, so he was very quiet and sheepish." ‌ As well as the attack, Ozzy has, reportedly, had multiple affairs over the years with various women, including a Russian teenager, and an English masseuse and cook who worked for the family. But the couple have always reconciled. And Sharon says Ozzy missed her life mad when work took her away from their LA base for stints on shows like The X Factor and Britain's Got Talent. "He hates living on his own,' she says. Explaining his dalliances, she adds: 'When he is on tour he is in a hotel room on his own. And you don't have to go out looking when you are a rock star, it (temptation) is everywhere." ‌ Glad that she made X Factor, judging alongside Simon Cowell and Louis Walsh, Sharon says our "be kind era" means it would be impossible to make it today, as it would be dubbed cruel. She agrees with current thinking that you should protect vulnerable stars, but adds: 'When somebody comes in dressed as a jockey and says they are going to sing Madonna, well that is different." ‌ She is glad she and Ozzy pulled the plug on their own MTV series, The Osbournes, back in 2005, saying the rise of the reality TV genre was damaging their children. "We stopped doing it because of the kids. They were earning too much money and they got too much attention and they were living a life which was basic bullshit," says Sharon. "It was parties here and parties there. They were flown all around the world. They were too young and it was bullshit. They went from a school in Buckinghamshire in their uniforms to Los Angeles and they could get into any club they wanted. They were too young, but they would let them in because of who they were. Fame and money is very hard to handle." ‌ The Osbournes was pivotal to other celebrities wanting to make their own 'at home with' series. But Sharon insists she doesn't envy the Kardashians, who reportedly made $100 million per season for their series, Keeping Up With the Kardashians, which ended in 2021. ‌ She says of their show: "You can t say it is about a normal family, as it is all about fashion and sex. I have never watched a full episode.' Glad to have had such a colourful life, Sharon is also very aware of how precious her time with Ozzy now is. She says: "Time is the most precious thing we have. You can't buy time. The days drip by, but the years fly by and suddenly you wake up and you are old. But I like getting old, as I feel I have got wisdom." 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