Ravage bookcover

Ravage

An Astonishment of Fire
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Description

Ravage: An Astonishment of Fire draws together MacGillivray's
extensive research into the life and work of Norwegian-Shetlandic poet
Kristján Norge, who vanished from Eilean a' Bhàis in the Outer Hebrides
in 1961. Comprising two previously unpublished manuscripts by Norge, Optik: A History of Ghost (1950) and Ravage
(1961), this collection also includes rare original material, giving
insight into Norge's troubled existence and mysterious disappearance.

Through a combination of fragments that include poetry, logbook entries and correspondence between historical figures such as Sir David Brewster and Sir Walter Scott, MacGillivray introduces us to the troubled and mysterious character of Kristján Norge. The book ranges from meditations on Greek optics, to accounts of isolation and demonic transformation on a remote island, to various archival materials including maps and photographs that bring the story of Norge to life.

The book includes a QR code which can be used to access extra multimedia material by MacGillivray to further flesh out the world of Kristján Norge.

Product Details

PublisherBloodaxe Books
Publish DateJanuary 09, 2024
Pages360
LanguageEnglish
TypeBook iconPaperback / softback
EAN/UPC9781780376776
Dimensions9.1 X 6.1 X 1.0 inches | 1.5 pounds

About the Author

MacGillivray is the Highland name of writer and artist Kirsten Norrie. Her poetry and multi-disciplinary practice inhabits a rich artistic universe encompassing performance art, song-writing and the use of visual media such as sculpture and photography. She has published three other poetry books, The Last Wolf of Scotland (Red Hen, US, 2013), The Nine of Diamonds: Surroial Mordantless (Bloodaxe Books, 2016) and The Gaelic Garden of the Dead (Bloodaxe Books, 2019). Her non-fiction work, Scottish Lost Boys (as Kirsten Norrie), was published by Stranger Attractor/The MIT Press in 2018. Her other US connections include performing there with many musicians, including Thurston Moore and Arlo Guthrie. She had a fellowship at the Library of Congress which enabled her to spend time with Navajo and Hopi people in Arizona. In one of her performance pieces she walked in a straight line with a dead wolf on her shoulders through the back streets of Vegas into the Nevada desert. The Last Wolf of Scotland told the story of an early Scottish settler who suffered a scalping, and she recorded Sitting Bull's great grandson reading from the book. She is currently working on an anti-Western, An American Book of the Dead, a novel set in New Mexico and the Scottish Highlands. She has taught at the Universities of Oxford, Cheltenham and Gloucester and Edinburgh College of Art. After living for many years in Edinburgh, she is now based in Oxford.

Reviews

"MacGillivray's The Gaelic Garden of the Dead is magnificent. It is neither violent or formal for its own sake, but rebels against complacent, lyrical histories in voices compressed to a haunting and haunted diamond precision. What vivid strangeness, for instance, to hear again the unsung recusant poet, Mary Queen of Scots, in our secular millennium? The chromatic lines balance splendidly on the razor-edge between imaginary and real time, making her a high modernist in the tradition of her great voice-walkers and forebears Burns, Scott, and MacDiarmid. You are holding in your hands a spell of sibylline leaves."--Ishion Hutchinson

'MacGillivray's poems come at us with one language wearing the pelt of another, and in the affray that follows it is hard to tell whether dead or living mouth carries the fiercer bite. Blood-boltered, thrawn and unco, her work is a Samhain of unexorcised historical memory, ventriloquised with the 'cognition of bone'. Here the blasted landscapes of the pre-forgotten present give way to the richer patternings of the tree alphabet, all under the sovereignty of our highland Orpheus, the executed Mary Queen of Scots. Not since Sorley MacLean hymned the woods of Raasay have the ghosts of the Gaelic past bestrode the present more imperiously.' - David Wheatley, on The Gaelic Garden of the Dead

'The subtitle "An Astonishment of Fire" says all you need to know about MacGillivray's book: this is explosive work. Ravage presents the life and work of invented Norwegian-Shetlandic poet Kristján Norge, who "vanished" from the Outer Hebrides in 1961. MacGillivray invites us to live and breathe Norge's last days, demons and all.' - Chris McCabe, Librarian, National Poetry Library, in The Bookseller (Autumn 2023 Highlights)

'A toweringly original - multi-genre, documentary, polyphonic, heteroglossic - tour-de-force from MacGillivray, reminiscent of her The Last Wolf of Scotland in its unique and restless form and visionary imagination. No one else is writing like this. No one has ever written like this. Except maybe Kristjan Norge.' - Steve Ely, Broken Sleep Books (Books of the Year 2023)

'Ravage meditates on a lost poet's work. I sense that a grail of Norge's complex creativity was gathered by Moncreiff; MacGillivray in turn carries it in this extraordinary vessel, as his co-choisiche (spirit co-walker) ... Perhaps our place, in turn, is to allow ourselves astonishment. The forensic re-readings will follow, as questions rise from the saline ash.' - Beth McDonough, DURA (Dundee University Review of the Arts)

'Combining the arcane scholarship of Robert Graves's The White Goddess (1948) and the gothic horror of The Wicker Man (1973), MacGillivray's Ravage speaks to us from an eerie and evanescent past [...] Brittly beautiful poems of "lucent pharography" perform insistent incantations, working the permutations of a metaphysical vocabulary of fire, ice, bone and ash [...] A floridly compelling fantasia, [Ravage] opens an audacious portal into rarely glimpsed realms...' - David Wheatley, The Times Literary Supplement

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