My Cave Art
Andrew Keanie’s poems have appeared in print from time to time. This is the first book-length collection. These poems are sometimes monologues, and sometimes they are lyrical. They can be spiritual and visceral. They can be cosmically melancholic and facetiously political. They can be deeply personal and daftly detached.
Speaking sometimes in the guttural and looking sometimes at the stars, Keanie writes out of a lingering suspicion that the world we are so often coerced and muddled into getting on with is a disputable mirage.
About the author:
Andrew Keanie is a lecturer at Ulster University. He has written books, articles, reviews and book chapters on several of the writers of the English Romantic era. He lives just outside Dungiven with his wife and near his grown-up daughter.
92 pages
ISBN: 978-1-910996-46-1
Andrew Keanie’s poems have appeared in print from time to time. This is the first book-length collection. These poems are sometimes monologues, and sometimes they are lyrical. They can be spiritual and visceral. They can be cosmically melancholic and facetiously political. They can be deeply personal and daftly detached.
Speaking sometimes in the guttural and looking sometimes at the stars, Keanie writes out of a lingering suspicion that the world we are so often coerced and muddled into getting on with is a disputable mirage.
About the author:
Andrew Keanie is a lecturer at Ulster University. He has written books, articles, reviews and book chapters on several of the writers of the English Romantic era. He lives just outside Dungiven with his wife and near his grown-up daughter.
92 pages
ISBN: 978-1-910996-46-1
Andrew Keanie’s poems have appeared in print from time to time. This is the first book-length collection. These poems are sometimes monologues, and sometimes they are lyrical. They can be spiritual and visceral. They can be cosmically melancholic and facetiously political. They can be deeply personal and daftly detached.
Speaking sometimes in the guttural and looking sometimes at the stars, Keanie writes out of a lingering suspicion that the world we are so often coerced and muddled into getting on with is a disputable mirage.
About the author:
Andrew Keanie is a lecturer at Ulster University. He has written books, articles, reviews and book chapters on several of the writers of the English Romantic era. He lives just outside Dungiven with his wife and near his grown-up daughter.
92 pages
ISBN: 978-1-910996-46-1