Share this page
These poems come from a special recording for the Poetry Archive:

-
Summer Snow, Hutchinson 1990 - out of print
Buy
-
In and Out the Mind: Tragic Ideas of Mind and Body, Princeton University Press 1992
-
Angel, Bloodaxe 1993 - out of print
Buy
-
Whom Gods Destroy: Elements of Greek and Tragic Madness, Princeton University Press 1995
-
Fusewire, Chatto 1996
Buy
-
Rembrandt Would Have Loved You, Chatto 1998
Buy
-
I'm a Man: Sex, Gods and Rock 'n' Roll, Faber and Faber 2000
-
Voodoo Shop, Chatto 2002
Buy
-
The Soho Leopard, Chatto 2004
Buy
-
52 Ways of Looking at a Poem, Vintage, 2004
Buy
-
Tigers in Red Weather, Little-Brown 2005
Buy
-
Ruth Padel Reading from her Poems, The Poetry Archive 2005
Buy
-
Darwin - A Life in Poems, Chatto & Windus 2008
Buy
-
The Poem and the Journey Vintage, 2008
Buy
-
The Mara Crossing, Chatto and Windus 2012
Buy
-
Where the Serpent Lives, Little Brown, 2010
Buy
-
Silent Letters of the Alphabet, Bloodaxe 2010
Buy
Ruth Padel (b. 1947) has won the National Poetry Competition and written six collections of poetry, several shortlisted for the T.S. Eliot or Whitbread Prize; taught Greek at Oxford, sung in an Istanbul nightclub, is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and Zoological Society of London, and a great great grand-daughter of Charles Darwin.
She writes prose as well as poetry. "There are few women writing non-fiction today with such a sophisticated understanding of language, nuanced approach to style, and willingness to engage with the big issues, personal and political" (Guardian). The much-loved 52 Ways of Looking at a Poem is based on her Independent on Sunday column (in which she discussed one contemporary poem each week), and I'm A Man, on Greek myth, rock music and the "invention of the teenager", featured as a clue in Ian Rankin's thriller A Question of Blood. In Tigers in Red Weather she searches for wild tigers in Asian jungles.
Her poems draw unselfconsciously on an unusual breadth of cultural reference: high and low, humour and gravity, sit in strangely democratic balance in her work. 'Writing to Onegin' illustrates the Times Literary Supplement's account of her poetry as "Wallace Stevens hijacking Sylvia Plath with a dash of punk Sappho thrown in." In a free version of a passage from Pushkin it combines references to Charon and Darth Vader in dense, musical lines which celebrate the risk in writing anything, especially as a woman.
Art and creativity permeate her work. 'Shaping Up' and 'Kiss' show musician Tori Amos and painter Bridget Riley making new music and new painting, finding "a shape for pain." 'Pharoah's Cup' is celebrated for its beauty: "Who wouldn't be glad / To have made it?" In 'Icicles Round A Tree In Dumfriesshire' (winner of the 1997 National Poetry Competition), an ice-sculpture evokes meditation on love, creativity and truth.
Padel's expressive reading style matches the poems' rich texture. She provides illuminating introductions to each poem: even, endearingly, mentioning when a factual detail in a poem has turned out to be wrong. This recording shows her, in Jeanette Winterson's words, as "sexy, strong, rhythmic, passionate, fully alive and a whiz with words."
Her recording was made on 29 January 2003 at the Audio Workshop, London, and was produced by Richard Carrington.

2004 Poetry Book Society Choice
The Soho Leopard
Website
1998 Poetry Book Society Choice
Rembrandt Would Have Loved You
Website
1997 National Poetry Competition winner
Website