Publisher's Synopsis
Ends and Beginnings is Iain Crichton Smith's most ambitious collection for years. It begins in elegy, with the exiles and deaths about which he writes so memorably, and progresses through place, history and positive change.
After a trip to the Golan Heights, he conceived a major poem on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, using an unaccustomed Biblical idiom. He considers the isolated people of his native Lewis, and those isolated in a wider culture-scholars, writers, lovers, the old-whose need for communion is thwarted by estranging disciplines or by the depredations of history.
Iain Crichton Smith's Collected Poems (1992) received the Saltire Prize, one of Scotland's highest literary accolades. Douglas Dunn wrote in The Times Literary Supplement of `that purity, that touch of originality, which marks poetry at the limits of intuition and imagining.' Robert Nye in The Times declared of the Collected Poems: `Crichton Smith's net is quite wide, but its meshes are splendidly small, and he is always catching more than he probably intended.'