Books:
Click on the book covers to see more
& to order the book
Katy Evans-Bush’s Joe Hill Makes his Way into the Castle is partly an elegy to Kenneth Patchen, partly mimesis, and partly a way into her own poetic world. The poems preserve the imagination amid a world of unrelenting violence, maintain child-like wonder, and make her life (especially post-Covid) into legend. Evans-Bush’s poems use fragments and push into Patchen’s aesthetic – in which interpretations of nature and human nature abide to some kind of omnipotent goodness – but are wholly her own.”
—Sean Singer
“These are poems of such determination and energy, they manage not only to look into what’s broken or breaking in our civilisation but to coerce from the charged particles of language a subtext of awareness and empathy that is immensely encouraging. Katy Evans Bush has put her intelligence and wit to work without compromise.”
—Rachael Boast
“Instead of tricks and secrets, sweep and originality makes Broken Cities stand out. Katy Evans-Bush's joy, inventiveness and pleasure in the music of language really engages.”
—Ian Duhig
“On every page there is the strongest sense of being in the thick of the human crowd.”
—Annie Freud
“Egg Printing Explained is a dance of language: dramatic, comic and exuberant. What is especially dazzling is the cavalcade of forms and registers. The poems shift in mood and music from plain song to baroque, from blues to opera, and no reader will ever forget the exhilarating and brilliantly sustained ‘The Love Ditty of an ‘eartsick Pirate’. This is a sharply-written book from one of our sharpest wits. But it is also one of the most generous and melodic books of contemporary poetry I’ve read in some time.”
—David Morley
“This intimate voice, in this accomplished collection, points to an unbridled versatility… These are carefully managed poems, never experimental in any formal sense, yet the poet is evidently nourished by a ludic spirit which allows for a collision of registers, a promiscuity of styles, and boundless performative verve.”
—Julian Stannard
“Katy Evans-Bush combines the intellectual rigour of the literary critic with the dynamism of a seasoned traveller in the blogosphere. These essays place poetry at the heart of contemporary culture, meeting at the borders it shares with music, politics and sculpture. She writes about art and life in a way that is generous, witty and incisive.
“It’s a thrill to read these essays from our foremost blogger. It’s testament to her talent and a validation of blogging in general. Flicking through these essays on Negative Capability, Dylan Thomas, plagiarism and poetic metre, Katy’s significant contribution to British and international poetry becomes clear.”
—John Field
“The most exciting news in contemporary poetry is not English or American but a mid-Atlantic, old-and-new-world marriage of the two, renewing the verbal contract. In her saucy, brilliant debut, Katy Evans-Bush proves one of the brightest offspring of this marriage. “I lashed myself to the texts of love,” she writes, “as if they were a raft.” When she reminds us, “Nothing is more dangerous than a weak imagination,” it reverberates with earned authority. She deserves to be read everywhere.”
—David Mason
“Katy Evans-Bush can tell an offbeat story the way you’ve never heard it before, but wanted to. Her ironised yet romantic fatalism is a model of wit and restrained emotion.”
—John Stammers
“For Henry, having two countries meant staged risk, and privacy. For Oscar, having the world meant everything bet on the one toss. In a 20's Modernist trope, this sequence hints at big unanalysed scandals by almost making them cockney rhyming slang: Evans-Bush shows us Two Great Late Victorians through the prism of the 1920s, even while she looks back 90 years at the Modernists, in a double manoeuvre.
”In literary judgment we think about sex, but in our own lives we think about love. An equal attention to Henry James and Oscar Wilde at once can illuminate both. Henry remains, at this stage, Evans-Bush's object of quiet love: touchstone to a vision of love that is the secret, and the secret joy of these poems.”
—Ira Lightman
“These poems are a gift that lifts the spirits on dark evenings. They demonstrate what can be drawn from the chaos of our times. An integrity in seeing and expressing this chaos, seems to me Katy Evans- Bush’s own particular breathtaking genius. It is a brave, brilliant, intoxicating body of work.”
—Nancy Campbell
“These formally dexterous poems centre around a personal narrative of belonging and alienation that explodes into a series of furious hymns to the downtrodden and forgotten, both past and present. Complex, political, and somehow exuberant: a bracing rollercoaster of a book.”
—Jacqueline Saphra
“As political as it is personal and so coherent it's like a single object, entirely, assuredly, unquestionably itself from start to finish.
Based on lines by Kenneth Patchen, it is written as though in a trance. All the hard won skill, nuance, formal mastery and insight are second nature here, at the service of the decisive moment, with Katy Evans Bush completely and magnificently in charge. These aren't poems you read, these are poems that happen to you. So buckle up! It's gonna be a hell of a ride but you are in completely safe hands.
—Natalia Zagorska-Thomas
“Whilst anthologies often play up their diversity, the pleasure of 'the like of it' lies in the fact that these writers seem to be in conversation with each other, all working towards a mutual idea about what literature should be. They share sensuousness, a subtlety of line, an intelligent sense of humour and a seriousness about their art, born out of the knowledge that: ‘Nothing's real until you say it, and even then - / knowing how to do things with words can be terrible.' Inventive, well-read and wise, these Songs of Experience are a real treat for those who like their poetry grown-up.”
— Clare Pollard
A Room of Someone Else’s
Baroque in Hackney is no longer.
But I’m back online, in A Room of Someone Else’s. Intermittent posts on arts, culture, politics, the odd funny story (I hope) and updates from the cost of living crisis.
“I'm a poet, essayist & blogger starting a new life after being forced from my home by rising rents. My book on homelessness, displacement & precarity will be published by CB Editions. In the meantime, here's where I'm writing about my new world.”
If you have experience of homelessness or precarity and would like to be on the paid email list, please let me know.