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Rhizodont

Katrina Porteous
Barcode 9781780377131
Paperback

Original price £10.66 - Original price £10.66
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Release Date: 21/06/2024

Genre: Poetry & Drama
Label: Bloodaxe Books Ltd
Language: English
Publisher: Bloodaxe Books Ltd

Winner of the Laurel Prize 2025. Against a backdrop of vast geological time and recent fossil-fuel burning history, Porteous’s poems explore issues of social and environmental change as well as technological revolution – autonomous systems, AI, and remote-sensing techniques used to measure Earth’s changing climate in the Antarctic.

Winner of The Laurel Prize 2025

330 million years ago what is now the rocky shore close to Katrina Porteous’s Northumberland home was a tropical swamp inhabited by three-metre long predatory fish with huge tusk-like teeth. They belonged to a family of lobe-finned fishes which evolved to move on land as well as swim, and which are the ancestors of all four-limbed vertebrates, including humans. The fossil fish found in Northumberland is called the ‘rhizodont’.

Porteous’s new collection begins with a lovingly-observed contemporary journey through these ancient landscapes, from the former coal-mining communities of the Durham coast, where the coal-bearing Carboniferous strata are overlain with younger rocks, to the Northumberland shores where the rhizodont’s remains were found. Against a backdrop of vast geological time and recent fossil-fuel burning history, these poems address current issues of social and environmental change. They are followed by two sequences about aspects of the latest technological revolution – autonomous systems and AI, and the remote-sensing techniques used to explore the most inaccessible reaches of our planet, Antarctica, to measure Earth’s changing climate.

The poems unfold from England’s North-East coast into global questions of evolution, survival and extinction – in communities and languages, and throughout the natural world, where hope resides in Life’s astonishing powers of reinvention.

Rhizodont is Katrina Porteous's fourth poetry collection from Bloodaxe, and extends territory explored in her three previous books. It combines scientific themes from Edge (2019) with the ecological localism of Two Countries (2014) and The Lost Music (1996), both of which were concerned with the landscapes and communities of North-East England. Rhizodont won The Laurel Prize 2025 and was shortlisted for the T.S. Eliot Prize 2024.