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(October 23, 1938 – January 25, 2011) |
Life and work
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His first Carcanet collection was nominated for a Whitbread Book Award). Throughout his life, Langley maintained a journal, extracts from which were a regular feature in the poetry journal PN Review, and which were published in book form by Shearsman Press in 2006.[6]
Although he lived in South Staffordshire most of his life, in the villages of Stonnall and Shenstone,[7] the inspiration for much of Langley's work came from the landscapes of Suffolk, where he resided during the closing years of his life. His range of reference was, however, extremely broad, and was informed by close acquaintance with the art criticism of Adrian Stokes and the work of psychoanalyst Melanie Klein.[8]
Publications
- Hem (Infernal Methods, 1978)
- Sidelong (Infernal Methods, 1981)
- Man Jack (Poetical Histories No. 30, 1993)
- Twelve Poems (Infernal Methods, 1994)
- Jack (Equipage, 1998)
- Collected Poems (Carcanet Press, 2000)
- More or Less (Many Press, 2002)
- Twine (Landfill, 2004)
- Journals (Shearsman, 2006)
- The Face of It (Carcanet Press, 2007)
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