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Denny Bradbury Books

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Tag Archives: Denny Bradbury

Denny in talks about ‘Borvo’

21 Thursday Apr 2011

Posted by dennybradburybooks in Fiction, Literacy News

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

book deals, Borvo, Denny Bradbury, publishers

We can reveal that Denny Bradbury is talking to a number of possible publishers about her new novel ‘Borvo’, which is expected to be in print and available by June.

Her second book has sparked a huge amount of interest since details were revealed last week.

Negotiations are ongoing,but Denny says she is still keeping her options open and also listening to any other offers that come up.

You can pre-order a copy of ‘Borvo’ by contacting us.

Denny Bradbury talks about fairytales

20 Wednesday Apr 2011

Posted by dennybradburybooks in Denny's Diary, fairytales

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Books, Denny Bradbury, Fairytales, Lord of the Rings, Writing

Denny Bradbury, author of Denagerie of Poems has been talking about her fairytales.  Her inspiration and what motivates her to write them.

Ebooks outsell books in America

19 Tuesday Apr 2011

Posted by dennybradburybooks in Literacy News

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Tags

Books, Denny Bradbury, digital books, ebooks

Around 55 million pounds worth of ebooks were sold in America in February that compares with just under 50 million pounds for traditional books.

Experts suggest ebooks may soon start outselling their rivals in the UK soon, at the moment they account for just five per-cent of the market.

Author Denny Bradbury says “the figures from the States are interesting, but feels many people will still opt for traditional old style book as they offer a different experience from the digital one .”

A History of Poetry: Part 3 – The hard truth and freedom to express

18 Monday Apr 2011

Posted by dennybradburybooks in Misc

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Tags

Browning, Denagerie of Poems, Denny Bradbury, DH Lawrence, History of Poetry, Oscar Wilde, Poetry, romantics, Tennyson, Victorian

Poetry has existed in many forms over many millennia.  Some styles have broken away from the ‘traditional’ of their time, whereas others have stood the test of time and which transcend the various poetical eras.

From the Babylonians to Ancient Greeks, Romans to Medieval Europe, Renaissance and Romantics, poetry has reflected views of the time as well as influenced them.

During the Victorian era, the traits started by the Romantics such as personal emotions (varying extremes from sadness to euphoria) and conflicting attitudes to religion versus science, really took hold.  Writings were seen to highlight the contrasts within the Industrial society and the political status of the Empire.

Lord Alfred Tennyson described beautifully the contradiction of the ‘heroic’ attitudes of imperial conquest and the questionable decisions taken in ‘The Charge of the Light Brigade’:

“Forward, the Light Brigade!”
Was there a man dismayed?
Not tho’ the soldiers knew
Someone had blundered;

(The Charge of the Light Brigade, Lord Alfred Tennyson)

‘The Cry of the Children’ by Elizabeth Barrett Browning is a moving piece exploring the use of children in factories and mines.  Again, she contrasts the idyllic life children should lead with the harsh reality of life, questioning, too, whether god actually exists to allow such hardships and injustice.

Oscar Wilde is another poet who emerged in the late Victorian age; and his poetry often targeted the rights’ and wrongs’ of the times: his poem ‘The New Remorse’ is an example of forbidden love.

Aside from the new ‘topics and emotions’ expressed during the Victorian era, experimental meter also came into practice during the 19th century:

Walt Whitman was an American poet who often used free verse where strict rhyme, rhythm, and specific techniques were not required – although often incorporated to allow a structure.

Gerard Manley Hopkins introduced ‘sprung’ rhythm to poetry – again, breaking away from the strict form of ‘running rhythm’ as he saw it to a freer form, albeit still encompassing a beat.

‘The child is father to the man’.
How can he be?  The words are wild.
Suck any sense from that who can:
‘The child is father to the man’.

(The Child Is Father To The Man, Gerard Manley Hopkins)

The honest and sometimes brutal outlook of life in the Victorian Era made way to the Georgian writings, war and yet another romantic wave.

This was but a short period in the history of poetry, often seen as the stepping stone between Victorian and Modern.

Yet it was during this time that DH Lawrence and TS Elliot made names for themselves.

Reject me not if I should say to you
I do forget the sounding of your voice,
I do forget your eyes that searching through
The mists perceive our marriage, and rejoice

(A Love Song, D.H. Lawrence)

Imagist poetry was a form to emerge during the Georgian era.  This style was thought to be a rebuff against abstract language and romanticism – an attempt to bring poetry back to ‘exact’ interpretation.

The apparition of these faces in the crowd;
Petals on a wet, black bough.

(In A Station Of The Metro, Ezra Pound)

This poem from 1913 is exact and to the point and describes the Imagist views perfectly.

Another style emerging around the same time as the Imagist was Surrealism.

A style brought to the fore by French poets, finding a launch-pad in Andre Breton’s ‘Manifesto of Surrealism’ (1924).  Poetry moved away from rigid writing within strict rules to ‘dream-state’ interpretation and accessing the subconscious mind.

Modern poetry has taken its’ own form.  There are no strict rules you have to follow – if you desire, you can return to the ancient styles of rhyme and meter, finding heroes in current affairs.  Alternatively, look to free verse where anything is accepted as long as you are true to yourself.

Take a look at poet from the present – Denny Bradbury varies her poetic styles yet you can see influences dating back hundreds of years.  Read through ‘Denagerie of Poems’ and explore life through her eyes.

There is a poet in all of us – when will it be your time to set yourself free?

Laura Scott

Interview with Denny Bradbury on her new book – Borvo

15 Friday Apr 2011

Posted by dennybradburybooks in Fiction, Literacy News, Misc

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Borvo, Denny Bradbury, King Alfred, New Book, Winchester

The King Alfred Statue in Winchester

Denny Bradbury talks about her new novel Borvo, set to published in June.

If you would like to pre-order then contact us.

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