Simon Armitage Popular Books

Simon Armitage Biography & Facts

Simon Robert Armitage (born 26 May 1963) is an English poet, playwright, musician and novelist. He was appointed Poet Laureate on 10 May 2019. He is professor of poetry at the University of Leeds. He has published over 20 collections of poetry, starting with Zoom! in 1989. Many of his poems concern his home town in West Yorkshire; these are collected in Magnetic Field: The Marsden Poems. He has translated classic poems including the Odyssey, the Alliterative Morte Arthure, Pearl, and Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. He has written several travel books including Moon Country and Walking Home: Travels with a Troubadour on the Pennine Way. He has edited poetry anthologies including one on the work of Ted Hughes. He has participated in numerous television and radio documentaries, dramatisations, and travelogues. Early life and education Armitage was born in Huddersfield, West Riding of Yorkshire, and grew up in the village of Marsden, where his family still live. He has an older sister, Hilary. His father Peter was a former electrician, probation officer and firefighter who was well known locally for writing plays and pantomimes for his all-male panto group, The Avalanche Dodgers. He wrote his first poem aged 10 as a school assignment. Armitage first studied at Colne Valley High School, Linthwaite, and went on to study geography at Portsmouth Polytechnic. He was a postgraduate student at the University of Manchester, where his MA thesis concerned the effects of television violence on young offenders. Finding himself jobless after graduation, he decided to train as a probation officer, like his father before him. Around this time he began writing poetry more seriously, though he continued to work as a probation officer in Greater Manchester until 1994. Career He has lectured on creative writing at the University of Leeds and at the University of Iowa, and in 2008 was a senior lecturer at Manchester Metropolitan University. He has made literary, history and travel programmes for BBC Radio 3 and 4; and since 1992 he has written and presented a number of TV documentaries. From 2009 to 2012 he was Artist in Residence at London's South Bank, and in February 2011 he became Professor of Poetry at the University of Sheffield. In October 2017 he was appointed as the first Professor of Poetry at the University of Leeds. In 2019 he was appointed Poet Laureate for ten years, following Carol Ann Duffy. He is a trustee of the National Poetry Centre, a charity established in 2022 which plans to open "a new national home for poetry" in Leeds in 2027. Writing Armitage's first book-length poetry collection Zoom! was published in 1989. As well as some new poems, it contained works published in three pamphlets in 1986 and 1987. His poetry collections include Book of Matches (1993) and The Dead Sea Poems (1995). He has written two novels, Little Green Man (2001) and The White Stuff (2004), as well as All Points North (1998), a collection of essays on Northern England. He produced a dramatised version of Homer's Odyssey and a collection of poetry entitled Tyrannosaurus Rex Versus The Corduroy Kid (shortlisted for the T.S. Eliot Prize), both published in 2006. Armitage's poems feature in multiple British GCSE syllabuses for English Literature. He is characterised by a dry Yorkshire wit combined with "an accessible, realist style and critical seriousness." His translation of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight (2007) was adopted for the ninth edition of The Norton Anthology of English Literature, and he was the narrator of a 2010 BBC documentary about the poem and its use of landscape. For the Stanza Stones Trail, which runs through 47 miles (76 km) of the Pennine region, Armitage composed six new poems on his walks. With the help of local expert Tom Lonsdale and letter-carver Pip Hall, the poems were carved into stones at secluded sites. A book, containing the poems and the accounts of Lonsdale and Hall, has been produced as a record of that journey and has been published by Enitharmon Press. The poems, complemented with commissioned wood engravings by Hilary Paynter, were also published in several limited editions under the title 'In Memory of Water' by Fine Press Poetry. For National Poetry Day in 2020, BT commissioned him to write "Something clicked", a reflection on lockdown during the COVID-19 pandemic. In 2023 The National Trust commissioned a poem by Armitage for Brimham Rocks in North Yorkshire. Artist Adrian Riley collaborated with Armitage and stone carver Richard Dawson to create 'Balancing Act' - a gateway-like public artwork carrying Armitage's poem where the rocks meet moorland. Writing as Poet Laureate In 2019 Armitage's first poem as Poet Laureate, "Conquistadors", commemorating the 1969 Moon landing, was published in The Guardian. Armitage's second poem as Poet Laureate, "Finishing it", was commissioned in 2019 by the Institute of Cancer Research. Graham Short, a micro-engraver, meticulously carved the entire 51-word poem clearly onto a facsimile of a cancer treatment tablet. Armitage wrote "All Right" as part of Northern train operator's suicide prevention campaign for Mental Health Awareness Week. Their video has a soundtrack of the poem being read by Mark Addy, while the words also appear on screen. On 21 September 2019 he read his poem "Fugitives", commissioned by the Association of Areas of Natural Beauty, on Arnside Knott, Cumbria, in celebration of the 70th anniversary of the National Parks and Access to the Countryside Act, during an event which included the formation of a heart outlined by people on the hillside. Armitage wrote "Ark" for the naming ceremony of the British Antarctic Survey's new ship RRS Sir David Attenborough on 26 September 2019. "the event horizon" was written in 2019 to commemorate the opening of The Oglesby Centre, an extension to Hallé St Peter's, the Halle orchestra's venue for rehearsals, recordings, education and small performances. The poem is incorporated into the building "in the form of a letter-cut steel plate situated in the entrance to the auditorium, the 'event horizon'". "Ode to a Clothes Peg" celebrates the bicentenary of John Keats' six 1819 odes of which Armitage says, "Among his greatest works, the poems are also some of the most famous in the English Language." On 12 January 2020, Armitage gave the first reading of his poem "Astronomy for Beginners", written to celebrate the bicentenary of the Royal Astronomical Society, on BBC Radio 4's Broadcasting House. "Lockdown", first published in The Guardian on 21 March 2020, is a response to the coronavirus pandemic, referencing the Derbyshire "plague village" of Eyam, which self-isolated in 1665 to limit the spread of the Great Plague of London, and the Sanskrit poem "Meghadūta" by Kālidāsa, in which a cloud carries a message from an exile to his distant wife. Armitage read his "Still Life", another poem about the lockdown, on BBC Radio 4's Today programme on 20 April 2020. A.... Discover the Simon Armitage popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Simon Armitage books.

Best Seller Simon Armitage Books of 2024

  • The Treasure of the City of Ladies synopsis, comments

    The Treasure of the City of Ladies

    Christine de Pizan & Sarah Lawson

    Written by Europe’s first professional woman writer, The Treasure of the City of Ladies offers advice and guidance to women of all ages and from all levels of medieval society, fro...

  • Selected Poems synopsis, comments

    Selected Poems

    Fernando Pessoa

    The writing of Fernando Pessoa reveals a mind shaken by intense inner suffering. In these poems he adopted four separate personae: Alberto Caeiro, Alvaro de Campos, Ricardo Reis an...

  • Home at Grasmere synopsis, comments

    Home at Grasmere

    Dorothy Wordsworth & William Wordsworth

    A continuous text made up of extracts from Dorothy Wordsworth's Journal and a selection of her brother's poems. Dorothy Wordsworth kept her Journal 'because I shall give William pl...

  • The Penguin Book of Victorian Verse synopsis, comments

    The Penguin Book of Victorian Verse

    Daniel Karlin

    Daniel Karlin has selected poetry written and published during the reign of Queen Victoria, (18371901). Giving pride of place to Tennyson, Robert Browning, and Christina Rossetti, ...

  • Medieval English Verse synopsis, comments

    Medieval English Verse

    Brian Stone

    Short narrative poems, religious and secular lyrics, and moral, political, and comic verses are all included in this comprehensive collection of works from the thirteenth and fourt...

  • Backpacks, Boots and Baguettes synopsis, comments

    Backpacks, Boots and Baguettes

    Mick Webb & Simon Calder

    High in the Pyrenees, a full day's hike from any trappings of civilisation, is no place for a human to be unless you are searching for the time of your life.This is the roof of a ...

  • Walking the Great North Line synopsis, comments

    Walking the Great North Line

    Robert Twigger

    Robert Twigger, poet and travel author, was in search of a new way up England when he stumbled across the Great North Line. From Christchurch on the South Coast to Old Sarum to Sto...

  • Collected Poems synopsis, comments

    Collected Poems

    Tony Harrison

    Tony Harrison published his first pamphlet of poems in 1964 and for over fifty years has been a prominent force in modern poetry. His poetic range is truly farreaching, from the in...

  • Selected Essays synopsis, comments

    Selected Essays

    Samuel Johnson

    This volume contains a generous selection from the essays Johnson published twice weekly as 'The Rambler' in the early 1750s. It was here that he first created the literary charact...

  • The Loom of Time synopsis, comments

    The Loom of Time

    Kalidasa

    Kalidasa is the major poet and dramatist of classical Sanskrit literature a manysided talent of extraordinary scope and exquisite language. His great poem, Meghadutam (The Cloud M...

  • Petrarch in English synopsis, comments

    Petrarch in English

    Thomas Roche

    Franceso Petrarch (13041374), creator of the sonnet form, remained for more than three hundred years the most influential poet in Europe, his works more widely read than even those...

  • Tick Bite Fever synopsis, comments

    Tick Bite Fever

    David Bennun

    Tick Bite Fever is the unconventional memoir of a very unconventional childhood. In the early Seventies, Dave Bennun's family transplanted themselves from Swindon to the wilds of K...

  • In the Heart of the Amazon Forest synopsis, comments

    In the Heart of the Amazon Forest

    Henry Walter Bates

    One of the most impressive of all Victorian scientists but also a marvellous writer, Bates' (18251892) account of his years in the upper reaches of the Amazon is almost too good to...

  • Deviant Love synopsis, comments

    Deviant Love

    Sigmund Freud

    Sigmund Freud, the founder of modern psychoanalysis, remade our view of the human mind by exploring the unconscious forces that drive us. This collection of his groundbreaking writ...

  • Records of Shelley, Byron and the Author synopsis, comments

    Records of Shelley, Byron and the Author

    Edward John Trelawny

    In February 1822 the writer and adventurer Edward John Trelawny arrived in Pisa to make the acquaintance of his heroes Shelley and Byron, leaving a broken marriage and an exotic se...

  • Spiritual Verses synopsis, comments

    Spiritual Verses

    The Jalaluddin Rumi & Alan Williams

    Begun in 1262 AD, Masnaviye Ma ‘navi, or ‘spiritual couplets', is thought to be the longest singleauthored ‘mystical’ poem ever written. As the spiritual masterpiece of the Persian...

  • The Rig Veda synopsis, comments

    The Rig Veda

    Wendy Doniger

    The earliest of the four Hindu religious scriptures known as the Vedas, and the first extensive composition to survive in any IndoEuropean language, the Rig Veda (c. 1200900 BC) is...

  • Natural History synopsis, comments

    Natural History

    Pliny the Elder

    Pliny's Natural History is an astonishingly ambitious work that ranges from astronomy to art and from geography to zoology. Mingling acute observation with often wild speculation, ...

  • The Lais of Marie De France synopsis, comments

    The Lais of Marie De France

    Marie France

    Marie de France (fl. late twelfth century) is the earliest known French woman poet and her lais stories in verse based on Breton tales of chivalry and romance are among the fines...

  • Selected Poems synopsis, comments

    Selected Poems

    John Dryden

    A new and comprehensive selection of Dryden's poetry, revealing him as a master of theatricality, ventriloquism, and unmistakable originality. Brought together here are many of the...

  • Troilus and Criseyde synopsis, comments

    Troilus and Criseyde

    Geoffrey Chaucer & Nevill Coghill

    Set against the epic backdrop of the battle of Troy, Troilus and Criseyde is an evocative story of love and loss. When Troilus, the son of Priam, falls in love with the beautiful C...

  • Essays and Letters synopsis, comments

    Essays and Letters

    Friedrich Hölderlin, Charlie Louth & Jeremy Adler

    One of Germany's greatest poets, Johann Christian Friedrich Hölderlin (17701843) was also a prose writer of intense feeling, intelligence and perception. This new translation of se...

  • An Apology for Raymond Sebond synopsis, comments

    An Apology for Raymond Sebond

    Michel Montaigne

    An Apology for Raymond Sebond is widely regarded as the greatest of Montaigne's essays: a supremely eloquent expression of Christian scepticism. An empassioned defence of Sebond's ...

  • The Faerie Queene synopsis, comments

    The Faerie Queene

    Edmund Spenser, C O'Donnell & Thomas Roche

    The Faerie Queene was the first epic in English and one of the most influential poems in the language for later poets from Milton to Tennyson. Dedicating his work to Elizabeth I, S...

  • On Government synopsis, comments

    On Government

    Cicero

    These pioneering writings on the mechanics, tactics, and strategies of government were devised by the Roman Republic's most enlightened thinker.

  • The Book of Taliesin synopsis, comments

    The Book of Taliesin

    Rowan Williams & Gwyneth Lewis

    The great work of Welsh literature, translated in full for the first time in over 100 years by two of its country's foremost poetsTennyson portrayed him, and wrote at least one poe...

  • Beowulf synopsis, comments

    Beowulf

    Janina Ramirez

    Part of the ALLNEW LADYBIRD EXPERT SERIES'This accessible illustrated guide is a great introduction to the story, its origins and its enduring legacy' BBC HISTORY Which is more ter...

  • The Poetry of Simon Armitage synopsis, comments

    The Poetry of Simon Armitage

    Tony Childs

    Simon Armitage is one of the leading poets of his generation. Since his first collection, Zoom, in 1989 he has published ten fulllength collections of poetry, while also writing an...

  • The Voyages of Sindbad synopsis, comments

    The Voyages of Sindbad

    N. J. Dawood

    Seven voyages. Seven missions. Only one man has survived them.A poor man meets a great sailor and asks to hear his tale. He is amazed to be told of seven journeys to foreign lands,...

  • Poems of Robert Burns Selected by Ian Rankin synopsis, comments

    Poems of Robert Burns Selected by Ian Rankin

    Robert Burns & Ian Rankin

    The farmer’s boy from Ayrshire who went on to be the most acclaimed of all Scottish poets, celebrated around the world, Robert Burns is a greater and more varied artist than those ...

  • The Pie At Night synopsis, comments

    The Pie At Night

    Stuart Maconie

    Factory, mine and mill. Industry, toil and grime. Its manufacturing roots mean we still see the North of England as a hardworking place. But, more than possibly anywhere else, the ...

  • The Book of Dede Korkut synopsis, comments

    The Book of Dede Korkut

    Geoffrey Lewis

    The Book of Dede Korkut is a collection of twelve stories set in the heroic age of the Oghuz Turks, a nomadic tribe who had journeyed westwards through Central Asia from the ninth ...

  • Language Myths synopsis, comments

    Language Myths

    Laurie Bauer & Peter Trudgill

    A unique collection of original essays by 21 of the world's leading linguists. The topics discussed focus on some of the most popular myths about language: The Media Are Ruining En...

  • Domestic Manners of the Americans synopsis, comments

    Domestic Manners of the Americans

    Fanny Trollope

    When Fanny Trollope set sail for America in 1827 with hopes of joining a Utopian community of emancipated slaves, she took with her three of her children and a young French artist,...

  • Leeds United - From Darkness into White synopsis, comments

    Leeds United - From Darkness into White

    Phil Hay

    The 200708 season for Leeds United Football Club will have been anything but regular. At the end of the previous season, one of England's most famous football clubs was relegated t...

  • Orlando Furioso synopsis, comments

    Orlando Furioso

    Ludovico Ariosto & Barbara Reynolds

    A dazzling kaleidoscope of adventures, ogres, monsters, barbaric splendor, and romance, this epic poem stands as one of the greatest works of the Italian Renaissance.

  • Selected Poems synopsis, comments

    Selected Poems

    D. H. Lawrence & James Fenton

    From early, rhyming works in Love Poems and Others (1913) to the groundbreaking exploration of free verse in Birds, Beasts and Flowers (1923) the poems of D. H. Lawrence challenged...

  • Poems of Thomas Hardy synopsis, comments

    Poems of Thomas Hardy

    Claire Tomalin & Thomas Hardy

    Thomas Hardy wrote some of the most moving and personal poems in his era and this collection brings together the best of his verse on life and love.Hardy's poems are by turn haunti...

  • Selected Journalism 1850-1870 synopsis, comments

    Selected Journalism 1850-1870

    Charles Dickens & David Pascoe

    Throughout his writing career Charles Dickens was a hugely prolific journalist. This volume of his later work is selected from pieces that he wrote after he founded the journal Hou...

  • Literature and Evil synopsis, comments

    Literature and Evil

    Georges Bataille & Alastair Hamilton

    'Literature is not innocent,' stated Georges Bataille in this extraordinary 1957 collection of essays, arguing that only by acknowledging its complicity with the knowledge of evil ...

  • Treading Grapes synopsis, comments

    Treading Grapes

    Rosemary George

    Tuscany offers some of the most spectacular scenery in Europe. The unique combination of cypress trees and olive groves mingling with vineyards and woods on undulating hillsides is...

  • Traces Remain synopsis, comments

    Traces Remain

    Charles Nicholl

    In these wonderfully stylish and eclectic essays, Charles Nicholl pursues the fugitive traces of the past with the skill and relish that have earned him a reputation as one of the ...

  • Idylls of the King synopsis, comments

    Idylls of the King

    Alfred Lord Tennyson & J. Gray

    Tennyson had a lifelong interest in the legend of King Arthur and after the huge success of his poem 'Morte d'Arthur' he built on the theme with this series of twelve poems, writte...

  • Selected Poems synopsis, comments

    Selected Poems

    Tony Harrison

    A revised edition of Tony Harrison's awardwinning Selected Poems This indispensable new selection of Tony Harrison's poems includes over sixty poems from his famous sonnet sequence...

  • Praise of Folly synopsis, comments

    Praise of Folly

    Desiderius Erasmus & Betty Radice

    Erasmus of Rotterdam (c. 14661536) is one of the greatest figures of the Renaissance humanist movement, which abandoned medieval pieties in favour of a rich new vision of the indiv...