
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


This week on the Verb we're taking in the air, and letting it out again as we explore how breath shapes and moulds the poetic line and stanza, how it can breathe life into a story and how breathing itself can be a kind of narrative. Ian McMillan is joined by the poet Stephen Watts whose poems pulse and flow with the rhythm of breath, novelist Emma Carroll whose book The Tale of Truthwater Lake breathes life into the future and revives the past, James Nestor a journalist and free diver who teaches us how to survive with and without breathing and poet Daisy Lafarge whose collection Life Without Air was shortlisted for the TS Eliot prize.
By BBC Radio 44.4
3030 ratings
This week on the Verb we're taking in the air, and letting it out again as we explore how breath shapes and moulds the poetic line and stanza, how it can breathe life into a story and how breathing itself can be a kind of narrative. Ian McMillan is joined by the poet Stephen Watts whose poems pulse and flow with the rhythm of breath, novelist Emma Carroll whose book The Tale of Truthwater Lake breathes life into the future and revives the past, James Nestor a journalist and free diver who teaches us how to survive with and without breathing and poet Daisy Lafarge whose collection Life Without Air was shortlisted for the TS Eliot prize.

7,722 Listeners

505 Listeners

881 Listeners

1,040 Listeners

5,463 Listeners

1,806 Listeners

292 Listeners

1,818 Listeners

1,065 Listeners

245 Listeners

1,931 Listeners

266 Listeners

344 Listeners

300 Listeners

838 Listeners

53 Listeners

185 Listeners

4,176 Listeners

3,186 Listeners

756 Listeners

73 Listeners

3,109 Listeners

2,451 Listeners

826 Listeners

29 Listeners