Taking Libertiesis the fifth collection by one of Ireland's most
important poets.
These poems emerge from the experience of being a single mother in
Belfast, and against a background of seemingly continuous crisis.
Political upheaval and anxiety, violence and death are all registered in
these poems, which ask questions about where independence is balanced by
our relationships with others, and where our inner lives meet the
globally connected world.
These are poems about cities - living, traveling and working in cities,
getting sick and dying in cities - but also about retreating from all
that: to her daughter at home, the budgie, cat and tortoise, or escaping
to the park, the municipal pool, the Irish countryside, Newfoundland, or
Paris, or into a Nina Simone song. This is a necessary book - a book
very much of our time - with a consistent tone that is brave and bleak,
but which also carries with it some much-needed humor, and as always
with Leontia Flynn - a wealth of beautiful writing.