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Peter Finch (2)

Author of How to Publish Your Poetry

For other authors named Peter Finch, see the disambiguation page.

30+ Works 106 Members 3 Reviews

Series

Works by Peter Finch

How to Publish Your Poetry (1985) 13 copies
How to Publish Yourself (1987) 13 copies
Real Cardiff (2002) 12 copies, 1 review
Real Cardiff Two (2004) 5 copies
Edging the Estuary (2013) 5 copies
How to Learn Welsh (1978) 4 copies
The Poetry Business (1994) 3 copies
Walking Cardiff (2019) 3 copies
Typewriter poems (1971) 3 copies
The Welsh Poems (2006) 3 copies
Poems for Ghosts (1991) 3 copies
Selected Later Poems (2007) 2 copies
Antibodies (1997) 2 copies
Real Cardiff Three (2009) 2 copies, 1 review
Make (1990) 2 copies
Selected Poems (1987) 2 copies
Food (2001) 1 copy
Between 35 and 42 (1982) 1 copy
Useful (1997) 1 copy
Collected Poems: One: 1968-1997 (2022) 1 copy, 1 review

Associated Works

The Poetry of Snowdonia (1989) — Contributor — 8 copies
My Landlord Must Be Really Upset (1970) — Contributor — 3 copies
Arcade, no. 34 (1982) — Contributor — 1 copy
The Edge of Necessary (2018) — Contributor — 1 copy
New Welsh Reader 125 (2020) — Contributor — 1 copy
Glas-nos: Poems for Peace/Cerddi dros Heddwch (1987) — Contributor — 1 copy

Tagged

anthology (2) Beat Generation (2) Box 4 (1) Cardiff (8) collection (1) English (2) English language (1) HER (2) him (7) import (1) language (1) literature (2) memoir (1) music (1) nature (1) non-fiction (9) Oxfam (1) poetry (18) publishing (6) rambling (1) reference (2) rock (1) study (4) to-read (3) UK - travel (1) Wales (11) walking (1) Welsh (3) Welsh history (1) writing (7)

Common Knowledge

Occupations
poet

Members

Reviews

3 reviews
This book has been in my possession for over a decade; bought before my adopted city was transformed once more. Real Cardiff is a great adventure, as the author Peter Finch seeks the clues that connect the modern capital to the marshland it once was. The poet's lyricism comes through strongly in the writing too, adding to the picture he paints of the city. Jan Morris praised it as one of the finest travel books about a city she'd read. What finer compliment could a travel writer receive?
Having read four, one, and now three, I think this is the least interesting so far. A few interesting facts but a lot of looking out at Cardiff from various high points. There feels like a lot of filler in this, one suspects Peter Finch had to work hard to find pages to write about nondescript suburbs and grey wet fields.
A fine collection of experimental and avant-garde poetry. I even understood some of it!

Lists

el (1)

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Statistics

Works
30
Also by
7
Members
106
Popularity
#181,886
Rating
3.8
Reviews
3
ISBNs
38

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