John Barnie (born 1941)[1] is a Welsh poet, essayist and editor, who was born in Abergavenny.[2]

He was a lecturer in the University of Copenhagen from 1969 until 1982. Following his return to Wales he was appointed assistant editor of the magazine Planet: The Welsh Internationalist and took over as editor in 1990 until 2006. He is a prolific poet with collections from various presses, most recently Cinnamon Press[3] and won an Arts Council of Wales Prize for Literature in 1990 with his essay collection The King of Ashes. A more recent project[4] with the Oxford Museum of Natural History based on his A Report to Alpha Centauri[5] focuses on his concern for nature and environmental issues.

Reviewers of his work have noted his interest in paleoanthropology and his pessimism about the evolutionary path taken by humans.[6] But they have also identified a wry humour in the presentation of this theme in his poetry[7] and a counter to an apparently misanthropic stance in his positive affirmation of the natural world, an ambivalence, in the words of one reviewer "that adds, rather than subtracts", from the experience of reading his work[8] while another has commented on his sense of the Earth as an inhuman place in spite of our certainty of our place in it [9] and.[10]

According to The Poetry Book Society, "Barnie's poetry shines an uncomfortable light onto issues of ecological degradation, mass extinction and mortality, yet remains lyrical and wry".[11]

His work is discussed in an interview for Sustainable Wales[12] with Robert Minhinnick.

He is also a musician with the blues band, Hollow Log.[13]

A volume of tributes to him from fellow poets, artists, musicians and critics, Wired to the Dynamo,[14] was published in 2018.

Publications

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Academic

  • War in Medieval Society (1974)

Essays

  • The King of Ashes (1989)
  • No Hiding Place (1996)
  • Fire Drill : Notes on the Twenty-First Century (2010)

Fiction

  • The Confirmation (1992)
  • The City (1993)
  • The Wine Bird (1998)

Autobiographical

  • Abergavenny (1997)
  • Tales of the Shopocracy (2009)
  • Footfalls in the Silence (2014)

On blues music (in Welsh)

  • Y Felan a Finnau (1992)

Poetry

  • Borderland (1984)
  • Lightning Country (1987)
  • Clay (1989)
  • Heroes (1996)
  • Ice (2001)
  • At the Salt Hotel (2003)
  • Sea Lilies: Selected Poems 1984-2003 (2006)
  • The Green Buoy (2006)
  • Trouble in Heaven (2007)
  • West Jutland Suite/Vestjysk Suite (2009)
  • The Forest Under the Sea (2010)
  • A Year of Flowers (2011)
  • The Roaring Boys (2012)
  • Wind Playing with a Man's Hat (2016
  • Departure Lounge (2018)
  • Sherpas (2018)
  • Sunglasses (2020)
  • Afterlives (2021)
  • A Report to Alpha Centauri (2021)

References

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  1. ^ "Barnie, John, 1941- - National Library of Wales Archives and Manuscripts". Archives.library.wales. Retrieved 27 August 2024.
  2. ^ "Press, performances, and events - John Barnie Papers". Archiveshub.jisc.ac.uk. Retrieved 27 August 2024.
  3. ^ "Search Results for "John Barnie "". Cinnamonpress.com. Retrieved 2022-04-15.
  4. ^ "John Barnie". Oumnh.ox.ac.uk. Retrieved 2022-04-15.
  5. ^ Tyrrell, Thomas (2021-11-16). "A Report to Alpha Centauri by John Barnie | Poetry". Wales Arts Review. Retrieved 2022-04-15.
  6. ^ Gopal Lahiri (18 July 2022). "Poetry Wales 57.3 Spring 2022". Poetry Wales. Retrieved 2023-01-18.
  7. ^ "Poetry, in brief | Book reviews". The Guardian. 2010-05-14. Retrieved 2023-01-18.
  8. ^ Tyrrell, Thomas (2021-11-16). "A Report to Alpha Centauri by John Barnie | Poetry". Wales Arts Review. Retrieved 2023-01-18.
  9. ^ "Matthew Jarvis, 'In/Human Place: The Poetry of John Barnie' - University of Wales".
  10. ^ Matthew Jarvis In/Human Place Wired to the Dynamo, Cinnamon Press, 2018
  11. ^ "Sunglasses by John Barnie". Poetrybooks.co.uk.
  12. ^ "A HAPPY PESSIMIST? AN INTERVIEW WITH JOHN BARNIE". Sustainablewales.org.uk. 15 November 2016. Retrieved 2022-04-18.
  13. ^ "Hollow Log | Aberystwyth Arts Centre". Aberystwythartscentre.co.uk (in Welsh). Retrieved 2022-04-18.
  14. ^ "9781788640046, Wired to the Dynamo - Poetry & Prose in Honour of John Barnie". Gwales.com. Retrieved 2022-04-15.