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The Stairwell
The Stairwell
Nov 15, 2025 8:07 PM

Author:Michael Longley

The Stairwell

Winner of the 2015 Griffin Poetry Prize

Shortlisted for the 2014 T.S. Eliot Prize

In The Stairwell, his tenth collection, Michael Longley’s themes and forms reach a new intensity. The second part of the book is a powerful sequence of elegies for his twin brother, Peter, and the dominant mood elsewhere is elegiac. The title poem begins: ‘I have been thinking about the music for my funeral …’ The two parts are also linked by Homer. Longley is well-known for his Homeric versions, and the Iliad is a presiding presence – both in poems about the Great War and in the range of imagery that gives his twin’s death a mythic dimension. Yet funeral music can be life-affirming. Longley has built this collection on intricate doublings, not only when he explores the tensions of twinship. The psychologically suggestive word ‘stairwell’ is itself an ambiguous compound. These poems encompass birth as well as death, childhood and age, nature and art, the animal and human worlds, tenderness and violence, battlefield and ‘homeland’. The Stairwell is a richly textured, immensely moving work. Michael Longley has the rare ability to fuse emotional depth with complicated artistry: to make them, somehow, the same thing.

Reviews

It is…the warmth in Longley’s writing that marks his poems out, makes them cherishable. Never forced, that affection is simply there.

—— Kate Kellaway , Observer

Longley’s 10th collection weaves his classical themes of war, family and flaura and fauna into measured songs of commemoration for those he has loved.

—— Paul McCartney , Sunday Times

A book of tiny, delicately lyrical commemorations and commendations.

—— Tablet

The Stairwell…is a stupendous collection of quiet beauty and universal significance.

—— Bel Mooney , Daily Mail

The book I have loved best, and have gone back to again and again.

—— Adam Nicolson , Evening Standard

The Stairwell is a book reckless in loving, to make the skin prickle and the eyes blur.

—— Peter Scupham , Literary Review

Important... New Grub Street is Victorian in its realist depiction of a society in transition, but modern in its portrait of the artist as an existentialist character making his solitary way in the world

—— Robert McCrum , Observer

· A great novel about creativity and money and marriage, and its greatness lies in the subtlety with which these three subjects become co-dependent on one another

—— Anthony Quinn , Guardian

Gissing…deserves to be more widely read. He is at his best describing the hardship and disappointments faced by the less well-off, striving in the face of an unforgiving Victorian Society

—— Nicholas Lavender QC , Counsel

Gissing’s insights into both the media and the effects of poverty still seem astonishingly fresh and current… Utterly compelling

—— Sunday Business Post

Cynical, realistic and enjoyable

—— Alan Taylor and Rosemary Goring , Herald

I have wondered why the wit, warmth and energy of the West Midlands had no voice amongst the younger English poets. Now it has. Liz Berry is the Black Country’s shining daughter.

—— Alison Brackenbury

What makes Berry an uplifting arrival is her rampant imagination and fully formed conceits

—— Tom Payne , Daily Telegraph

An utterly new voice, fresh, soaring, thrilling, she is one of those rare poets that make you want to wolf the book down and come back for more… A stunning debut

—— Jackie Kay , Big Issue

It is unusual for a young poet to have such a developed sense of how questions of voice, identity, place and readership can be resolved in poetry

—— Paul Batchelor , New Statesman

An amazing debut that signals great things to come in the future from this original, proud poet

—— Jade Craddock , Nudge

Wonderful…incredible words

—— Birmingham Mail

Utterly beautiful poems of being in love, being a woman and being free. She is destined to be a star in the cosmos of poetry!

—— Daljit Nagra , Big Issue

Liz Berry has an ability to bring the Black Country dialect to life with her poems

—— Diane Davies , Express and Star

One of the things she does so well, and that is particularly evident in 'How to Be Both,' is the way she can create an extremely sophisticated, complex, multileveled novel that reads beautifully

—— Erica Wagner

A marvellous exploration of what it means to look, then look again. Spiralling and twisting stories suggest the ways in which we can transcend walls and barriers - not only between people but between emotions, art forms and historical periods. It is a jeu d'esprit about a girl coming of age and coming to terms with her mother's death, a ghosting of a Renaissance fresco painter in a 21st-century frame and an exhortation to do the twist.

—— Sarah Churchwell , New Statesman Books of the Year 2014

A revelation. It blasts the doors open for the novel form and in a Woolf-like way makes all things possible. I imagine it will be one of those rare books that changes the way writers write novels

—— Jackie Kay , Observer

Ali Smith's novels soar higher every time and How to be both doesn't disappoint

—— Julie Myerson , Observer

Brilliant. No one combines experimentalism and soulfulness like Ali Smith

—— Craig Taylor , Observer

One of the most intelligent, inventive, downright impressive writers working anywhere in the world today. In Ali Smith we have a writer whose dazzling sophistication will surely be celebrated, studied and argues over hundreds of years after we're gone

—— Nick Barley , The Scotsman

Ali Smith is a master of language. Vigorous, vivid writing that is Ali Smith incarnate

—— Alice Thompson , Herald

Ingeniously conceived, gloriously inventive

—— NPR

Dizzyingly ambitious . . . endlessly artful, creating work that feels infinite in its scope and intimate at the same time. [A] swirling panoramic

—— Atlantic

Brilliant . . . the sort of death-defying storytelling acrobatics that don't seem entirely possible

—— Washington Post

Having read this now twice, in both directions so to speak, I've decided - and I do not write this flippantly - that Ali Smith is a genius

—— Susan McCallum , LA Review of Books

Approaches the world as only a novel can. The book moves not so much in a straight line as in a twisting helix pattern . . . delivers the heat of life and the return of beauty in the face of loss

—— Kenneth Miller , Everyday Ebook

A unique conversation between past and present

—— Milwaukee Journal

Wildly inventive . . . lyrical, fresh

—— Bustle Magazine
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