Pauline Stainer is a freelance writer and tutor. After many years in rural Essex and then on the Orkney island of Rousay, she spent a number of years in rural Suffolk. She now lives near Saffron Walden. Her nine poetry titles, all of which have been published by Bloodaxe Books, include The Lady & the Hare: New & Selected Poems (2003), which draws on five previous books, as well as a new collection, A Litany of High Waters. Her three subsequent collections are Crossing the Snowline (2008), Tiger Facing the Mist (2013) and Sleeping under the Juniper Tree (2017). Along with The Lady & the Hare, her collections The Honeycomb, Sighting the Slave Ship and The Ice-Pilot Speaks were all Poetry Book Society Recommendations. Her fourth collection The Wound-dresser’s Dream was shortlisted for the Whitbread Poetry Award in 1996. Pauline Stainer received a Cholmondeley Award for her poetry in 2009.
Over the past 20 years, Pauline Stainer has all but perfected the
art of illumination without demystification, in search of what she
calls “the divining shiver”, a phrase that can only gesture towards
the combination of physical immediacy and numinous wonder that her
marvellous poems possess… Stroke by stroke, apprehension by
apprehension, Stainer is building a unique and extraordinary body
of work.
*Guardian*
Her territory is predominantly that of legend: its symbols and its
creatures - the unicorn, the falcon, the serpent - but she often
draws them into a contemporary setting where they neither shed
power nor lose meaning. Her purpose is not so much to import the
ancient world into the modern as to demonstrate that those worlds
are of a piece: that old rituals still obtain, that old beliefs
still govern instinct.
*PBS Bulletin*
Pauline Stainer writes sacred poetry for the scientific
twenty-first century. Her poetry preserves a surety of vision,
insisting that belief can only increase with knowledge, and that
wisdom and faith are still provinces of careful, crystalline
language.
*Anne Stevenson*
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