There are all types of bodies.If youre lucky youll find someone whose skinis a canvas for the story of your life.Write well. Take care of the heartbeat behind it. Billy Letfords Dirt revels in the fallow, the tainted, the off , and the unloved. The poems embrace a good life stitched together with bad circumstances, bungled chances, missed callings. Whether loitering on the street corner, poackets ful eh ma fingers, or stumbling from a bar like a monkey in the jungle of traffic, stinking, wild and free, the characters in Letfords poems deliver one thing in spades: heart. On Friday I visit my seventy-seven-year-old granny. Shes smoking a joint. Its not a surprise. Letfords words are lightly worn yet carefully measured; they move between English and Scots, lyrical and concrete, accumulating what the poet has described as an array of textures. Resisting modernitys unearthly glare, it is a life with grain, with grit, rotten with wonder, that Letford seeks. The poems dig for a grace within dirts humble endurance. Theres dignity there. Lay yourself open.
William Letford was born in Stirling. He has received an Mlitt from Glasgow University, an Edwin Morgan Travel Bursary from the Arts Trust of Scotland, a New Writers' Award from the Scottish Book Trust, and a Creative Scotland Artists' Bursary which allowed him to spend 6 months travelling through India. His work has been published in New Poetries V and Bevel (Carcanet, 2012) which was shortlisted for the Seamus Heaney First Collection Prize.
* Dubbed 'the future of Scottish poetry', Letford among most popular poet-performers of his generation* Dirt was composed during six months travel in India and links Scottish and Indian themes* High profile launch event at Edinburgh Book Festival, with readings throughout the UK
'William Letford is his own man. His work is as utterly original and instantly recognisable as, say, Raymond Carver's or Billy Collins', though he's not like either. His last collection launched a brand new voice. This one, full of grit and tenderness, gives us many voices, places and stories.' Liz Lochhead; 'The pleasure I have gained from new Scottish genius William Letford's poems... will, I am confident, stay with me forever.' Nicholas Lezard, The Guardian; 'How Billy went from roofer to prize-winning poet' The Scotsman; 'While loving dirt is nothing new in poetry, Letford has his own unique take on it. Where he finds life blooming, he lives and lets live.' The Poetry School; 'William Letford belongs in the grand - and humble - tradition of Robert Burns. He has heart, a feeling for ordinary working people and enough Scottish spark to start a fire.' Kate Kellaway, The Observer