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Carol Ann Duffy

Author of The World's Wife

106+ Works 4,804 Members 74 Reviews 14 Favorited
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About the Author

Carol Ann Duffy has published four highly praised collections of poetry. Her last, "Mean Time", won the "Forward" Poetry Prize & the Whitbread Poetry Prize. She lives in Manchester, England. (Publisher Fact Sheets) Carol Ann Duffy was born on December 23, 1955 in Gasgow. She is a Scottish poet and show more playwright. She is also Professor of Contemporary Poetry at Manchester Metropolitan University, and was appointed Britain's Poet Laureate in May 2009. She is the first woman, the first Scot, and the first openly LGBT person to hold the position. She was a passionate reader from an early age, and always wanted to be a writer, producing poems from the age of 11. When Duffy was 15, June Scriven sent her poems to Outposts, a publisher of pamphlets, where it was read by the bookseller Bernard Stone, who published some of them. She applied to the University of Liverpool and began a philosophy degree there in 1974. She had two plays performed at the Liverpool Playhouse, wrote a pamphlet, Fifth Last Song, and received an honours degree in philosophy in 1977. She worked as poetry critic for The Guardian from 1988 -1989, and was editor of the poetry magazine, Ambit. In 1996, she was appointed as a lecturer in poetry at Manchester Metropolitan University, and later became creative director of its Writing School. She has since gone on to write several works of poetry and children's books. Her title's The World's Wife, Rapture, and The Bees made the New Zealand Best Seller List. (Publisher Provided) show less
Image credit: walnut whippet

Series

Works by Carol Ann Duffy

The World's Wife (1999) 896 copies, 16 reviews
Rapture (2005) 435 copies, 3 reviews
Selected Poems (1994) 315 copies, 5 reviews
Feminine Gospels (2002) 259 copies, 4 reviews
The Bees (2011) 226 copies, 6 reviews
Mean Time (1993) 166 copies, 2 reviews
The Tear Thief (2007) 120 copies, 2 reviews
Answering Back: Living Poets Reply to the Poetry of the Past (2007) — Editor; Contributor — 119 copies, 1 review
New Selected Poems (2004) 99 copies
Love Poems (2010) 91 copies, 2 reviews
Another Night Before Christmas (2010) 90 copies, 1 review
The Gift (2010) 79 copies, 3 reviews
Collected Poems (2015) 77 copies, 2 reviews
The Skipping-Rope Snake (2003) 73 copies
A Folio Anthology of Poetry (2009) 73 copies
The Christmas Truce (2011) 64 copies
Mrs Scrooge: A Christmas Tale (2009) — Author — 61 copies
Wenceslas: A Christmas Poem (2012) 58 copies, 2 reviews
I Wouldn't Thank You for a Valentine: Poems For Young Feminists (1992) — Editor — 57 copies, 2 reviews
Sincerity (2018) 55 copies, 1 review
The Lost Happy Endings (2006) 54 copies, 2 reviews
Standing Female Nude (1985) 54 copies, 1 review
The Other Country (1990) 54 copies
101 Poems for Children: A Laureate's Choice (2012) 50 copies, 2 reviews
Selling Manhattan (1987) 46 copies
The Hat (2007) 42 copies
1914: Poetry Remembers (2013) 40 copies
Jubilee Lines: 60 Poets For 60 Years (2012) — Editor — 38 copies, 1 review
Underwater Farmyard (2002) 38 copies
Out of Fashion: An Antholoogy of Poems (2004) 36 copies, 1 review
Off The Shelf: A Celebration of Bookshops in Verse (2016) — Editor — 34 copies, 1 review
The Princess's Blankets (2008) 34 copies, 2 reviews
Collected Grimm Tales (1996) 31 copies
Dorothy Wordsworth's Christmas Birthday (2014) 29 copies, 1 review
Rumpelstiltskin and Other Grimm Tales (1999) — Adapter — 28 copies, 1 review
Bethlehem: A Christmas Poem (2013) 28 copies
Moon Zoo (2004) 27 copies
Meeting Midnight (1999) 26 copies
The King of Christmas (2016) 26 copies, 1 review
Everyman (Faber Drama) (2015) 25 copies
Frost Fair (2019) 23 copies
The Wren-Boys (2015) 23 copies, 1 review
To the Moon: An Anthology of Lunar Poems (2009) 21 copies, 2 reviews
Advent Street (2022) 20 copies, 2 reviews
Pablo Picasso's Noel (2017) 17 copies
Christmas Eve at The Moon Under Water (2023) 13 copies, 1 review
Christmas Poems (2022) 11 copies
Love (2023) 7 copies, 2 reviews
A Christmas Ghost Story (2025) 7 copies
Nature (2023) 7 copies
Doris the Giant (2004) 7 copies
Three Wise Men (2024) 6 copies
Rat's tales (2012) 5 copies
More Grimm Tales (1997) 5 copies
My country (2017) 4 copies
Politics: Carol Ann Duffy (2023) 4 copies
Elegies (2023) 3 copies
The Manchester Carols (2009) 2 copies
Anvil New Poets 2 (1995) 1 copy
Pablo Picasso's Noël (2017) 1 copy
Nature (2023) 1 copy
Long Table 1 copy
Love (2023) 1 copy
In Memoriam: Poems of Bereavement (2012) — Introduction — 1 copy
Mon beau jardin (2010) 1 copy

Associated Works

Mrs. Dalloway (1925) — Introduction, some editions — 23,224 copies, 376 reviews
The Making of a Poem: A Norton Anthology of Poetic Forms (2000) — Contributor — 1,470 copies, 9 reviews
The Crimson Fairy Book (1903) — Introduction, some editions — 937 copies, 10 reviews
Poetry 180: A Turning Back to Poetry (2003) — Contributor — 851 copies, 10 reviews
The Nation's Favourite Poems (1996) — Contributor — 688 copies, 8 reviews
Selected Poems (1985) — Introduction, some editions — 633 copies, 5 reviews
180 More: Extraordinary Poems for Every Day (2005) — Contributor — 402 copies, 9 reviews
Stung with Love: Poems and Fragments (Penguin Classics) (2009) — Preface — 325 copies, 10 reviews
The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror: Fourteenth Annual Collection (2001) — Contributor — 257 copies, 2 reviews
The Pleasure of Reading (1992) — Contributor — 205 copies, 8 reviews
Erotica: Women's Writing from Sappho to Margaret Atwood (1990) — Contributor — 182 copies
After Ovid: New Metamorphoses (1994) — Contributor — 168 copies
Emergency Kit (1996) — Contributor, some editions — 121 copies, 1 review
Granta 103: The Rise of the British Jihad (2008) — Contributor — 109 copies
Sylvia Plath Poems Chosen by Carol Ann Duffy (2012) — Editor — 88 copies
The Virago Book of Wicked Verse (1992) — Contributor — 88 copies, 1 review
100 Queer Poems (2022) — Contributor — 74 copies
The Hungry Ear: Poems of Food and Drink (2012) — Contributor — 73 copies, 1 review
The Poets' Grimm: 20th Century Poems from Grimm Fairy Tales (2003) — Contributor — 70 copies, 1 review
Acid Plaid: New Scottish Writing (1997) — Contributor — 45 copies
The Vintage Book of Classic Crime (1993) — Contributor — 40 copies
Vice: An Anthology (1993) — Contributor — 40 copies
Loss: An Anthology (1997) — Contributor — 20 copies
AQA Anthology (2002) — Contributor — 19 copies
Modern Women Poets (2005) — Contributor — 16 copies

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Question for anyone who owns the Folio Anthology of Poetry in Folio Society Devotees (December 2025)

Reviews

82 reviews
I am a big fan of Duffy’s poetry; in fact, I have several collections of her work, and recently picked up a very thick compendium of her work. However, that did not stop me from picking up this adorable reprint of an earlier volume. What you can’t see in the image above, is the lovely matte gold background and little metallic gold bits in the flowers (it would make a nice gift for someone, hint, hint).

Duffy is the UK’s current poet laureate, appointed in 2009 (the first woman to hold show more the position). I love her poetry. LOVE. Her poetry is not pretentious, it’s accessible, often musical, moving and sometimes just plain fun. The overarching theme or symbol of this collection is the bee, precious and endangered, and there are many poems here about bees, but there are other poems that buzz around the same ideas: the precious and endangered. Here’s a short bee poem, the first of the collection:

BEES

Here are my bees,
brazen, blurs on paper
besotted; buzzwords, dancing
their flawless, airy maps.

Been deep, my poet bees,
in the parts of flowers,
in daffodil, thistle, rose, even
the golden lotus; so glide,
gilded, glad, golden, thus—

wise — and know of us:
how your scent pervades
my shadowed, busy heart
and honey is art.

————————
And here is one of my favorite poems from the collection:

THE WOMAN IN THE MOON

Darlings, I write to you from the moon
where I hide behind famous light.
How could you think it ever a man up here?
A cow jumped over. The dish ran away with

the spoon. What reached me were your joys, griefs,
here’s-the-craic, losses, longings, you lives
brief, mine long, a talented loneliness. I must have
a thousand names for the earth, my blue vocation.

Round I go, the moon a diet of light, sliver of peat,
wedge of lemon, slice of melon, half an orange,
silver onion; your human sound falling through space,
childbirth’s song, the lover’s song, the song of death.

Devoted as words to things, I gaze, gawp, deserts
where forests were, sick seas. When night comes,
I see you gaping back as through you hear my Darlings,
what have you done, what have you done to the world?
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"Words, words were truly alive on the tongue, in the head,
warm, beating, frantic, winged; music and blood.
"

Within every [great- infamous- legendary- mythic] tale of a man is a woman with an equally important story to tell. These poems are Her stories.

From Beauty choosing the Beast because of his repugnant exterior to an overprotective Queen Herod to Mrs Sisyphus suffering a fool for a husband to a middle-aged Mrs Rip Van Winkle and her husband armed with Viagra -- each poem subverts show more well-known tales with its unique perspective, real or imagined.

I'd recommend this collection to anyone who wants to read poetry but often feels too intimidated to do so. Especially if that person has an interest in the feminist slant on myths, legends, fairy tales, pop culture, etc.

4 stars

"Mrs Midas"
I couldn't believe my ears:
how he'd had a wish. Look, we all have wishes; granted.
But who has wishes granted? Him. Do you know about gold?
It feeds no one; aurum, soft, nontarnishable; slakes
no thirst. He tried to light a cigarette; I gazed, entranced,
as the blue flame played on its luteous stem. At least,
I said, you'll be able to give up smoking for good.


"Mrs Beast"
But behind each player stood a line of ghosts
unable to win. Eve. Ashputtel. Marilyn Monroe.
Rapunzel slashing wildly at her hair.
Bessie Smith unloved and down and out.
Bluebeard's wives, Henry VIII's, Snow White
cursing the day she left the seven dwarfs, Diana,
Princess of Wales...
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To the Moon is a mixed bag, like most poem anthologies. This selection by Carol Ann Duffy (the former Poet Laureate) has an interesting theme (the moon, obviously) but because of the variety of the poets there is no singular approach to that theme. For some of the poets, the moon is a mystery or a source of romance; for others it is cruel. For some it is central to their poem and for others it is just there to provide some colour. When one segment of the book did coalesce around a single show more approach – that is, when the modern poets started to address the Moon Landing – it became much more fascinating.

Regardless, it is an evocative book throughout. The silver satellite has "a talented loneliness", as Duffy puts it in her own contribution (pg. 164), and whilst the book does not mention it, I could not help but hear the cold-warm strains of Debussy's 'Clair de Lune' throughout. Some of the finest poetic minds are in this book, trying to grasp what the moon means to us, and you close the book "still feeling what it was like to dwell in that light" (pg. 157).
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Scots poet Carol Ann Duffy teams up with the immensely talented artist Jane Ray in this original fairy-tale picture-book about the power (the terrible power!) of stories. Jub, whose job it is to disperse the Happy Endings that give the world's children such pleasure at bedtime, is robbed by a malicious old witch of her sack of endings, leading to widespread despair and unhappiness. After a night in which the tales told to children get more and more horrifying, Jub happens upon a golden pen show more in the woods, and is inspired to write a tale in which the witch meets a terrible fate, and the Happy Endings are regained...

The pen is indeed mightier than the sword in The Lost Happy Endings, as Jub's story comes to pass, just as she wrote it. I found Duffy's narrative here both engrossing and thought-provoking, but I wonder whether it might not be a little too gruesome for some young children, especially the more sensitive ones. Bushes crouch like muggers, the witch dreams of biting little birds' heads off and crunching on them, and so on. Of course, traditional folk and fairy-tales are awash in gore, so I might be worrying needlessly. Perhaps this tale only seems more frightening because of Duffy's knack for intense, evocative description. Whatever the case may be, I found this tale within a tale fascinating, and thought that Jane Ray's accompanying artwork was gorgeous. I can easily see why this one was short-listed for the Kate Greenaway Medal. Recommended to fairy-tale and story lovers who appreciate (despite the happy ending) a darker, grimmer selection.
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Statistics

Works
106
Also by
30
Members
4,804
Popularity
#5,229
Rating
3.9
Reviews
74
ISBNs
259
Languages
6
Favorited
14

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