What Girls Do In The Dark

Shortlisted for the Polari Book Prize, 2021

What Girls Do in the Dark invites us to leap into deep space – across a universe where light, names, place and time become the “distance between things that stand like sisters”. We venture through strange night-time transformations, between northerly points and places of being and not-being. In a twilight alive with glimmering energy, we discover not just outer-space, but inner space – where the body and the self are made of infinite galaxies, illuminated for the briefest blink of a life.

Garland’s poetry is rooted in the realm of gothic imagination, mythology and the uncanny. It contains magnitudes and magic, feminist fables starstruck with science and astronomy. Like comets, these dazzling poems explore containment, liberation, near-misses, extinction, and ultimately, they ask what it means to escape the pull of gravity and blaze your own bright, all-consuming and astonishing path.

 

 

Review

Praise for What Girls Do in the Dark:

“This is the best poetry book I’ve read in years. Rosie Garland’s What Girls Do in the Dark seduced and enchanted me. I love the strangely simple use of language that somehow continually surprised. The imagery is at times dark like a modern-day fairy story with a flavour of science or sci-fi but grounded in human frailty. I found it beguiling and poignant throughout. This collection is for everyone who loves poetry and everyone who never knew they loved poetry. By exploring the other-worldly, Garland has hit the greater truth of our day to daydreams and fears.”Henry Normal

“Rosie Garland’s poetry is nothing short of magical. She opens our eyes to strange new worlds and possibilities. What Girls Do In The Dark is seductive, daring and deliciously queer. I loved it.” – Paul Burston

“What girls do in the dark is shimmer, seethe, scorch – and sometimes slip their skins and come undone. Sometimes, girls are comets, foxes, stars. In these dark-bright and necessary poems, Rosie Garland leads us, gentle but firm, to the edges of the galaxy to see what is and what might be, to better see ourselves. As the poet says: Permit darkness. Find light.” – Tania Hershman

“Garland has excelled herself in this collection – her poems bleed, riff and itch into each other making the book a cohesive and truly satisfying ‘rock-and-rolling calligraphy of bad behaviour along the scroll of orbit’. How does she manage this with such disparate subjects as astronomy, eczema, latrines, and foxes? – and yet she does. With each poem I kept thinking “This can’t get any better” – and each one did, and added to and multiplied the whole.”– Char March

 

Poetry

What Girls Do in the Dark

What Girls Do in the Dark invites us to leap into deep space - across a universe where light, names, place and time become the “distance between things that stand like sisters”.

As in Judy

Behind the scenes in the life and mind of the award-winning poet, novelist, groundbreaking performance artist and singer with The March Violets. “She imagines the inner and outer landscapes we all inhabit with eloquence and grace. Shine your light, Rosie." - David Hoyle

Things I Did While I Was Dead

Articulating diverse themes including childhood, relationships, gender and serial-killers, this collection showcases her thought-provoking and passionate award-winning poetry. "Candid, tender and surprising… Things I Did While I Was Dead packs a powerful punch." - Jackie Kay MBE

Everything Must Go

Rosie Garland’s unflinching perspective on her year with throat cancer. She shows how any disease – cancer especially – attacks your humanity. Yet hope & resilience shine through, even when things get tough. Especially when things get tough.

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“The Night Brother is a rich and ambitious tale set in late Victorian Manchester… Garland’s prose is a delight, playful and exhuberant… Full marks!” – The Times

“Echoes of Angela Carter’s more fantastical fiction reverberate through this exhuberant tale.” –

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The Night Brother”Echoes of Angela Carter’s more fantastical fiction reverberate through this exhuberant tale.” – The Sunday Times

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“The Palace of Curiosities is a jewel-box of a novel, with page after page, scene after scene, layer after layer of treats and surprises. Garland is a real literary talent: definitely an author to watch.” Sarah Waters