'Now gather round and lend an ear / for there's a ballad I would sing
'Of famous Captain Avery / And how he went a-pirating.'
Brave, anarchic folk heroes or cruel, black-hearted villains? In the long violent history of piracy, the men and women who roamed the oceans under the black flag have been both of these and all shades of chivalry and chicanery in between.
Now Thomas Tyrrell's debut collection, The Poor Rogues Hang, written with the rhythmic swagger of the ballad and the shanty, retells the stories of the intrigues, robberies and murders of the most notorious pirates, freebooters, sea rovers, corsairs, buccaneers, marauders and all-round bad eggs from the 'golden age' of piracy and beyond.
You may have heard of Blackbeard or Captain Kidd, but did you know about Grainne Mhaol, the Irish pirate queen? Did you know pirates once kidnapped Julius Caesar? Tyrrell illuminates their savage, surprising and little-known careers using a pleasing variety of poetic forms, numbering among them ballads, ballades, blank verse, fourteeners, quatrains, sapphics, sonnets, syllabics, and even free verse.
So splice the mainbrace, set sail and join him as he delves into the sour history of piracy's entanglement with the slave trade, the surprisingly democratic way a pirate ship was run and the social injustices and human failings that drove men to a life from which there was no turning back until the inevitable violent end. Drink up me hearties, yo ho!
Industry Reviews
"The Poor Rogues Hang displays many of Tyrrell's virtues as a poet: his elegant manipulation of rhyme and metre; his evocative imagery, derived from a meticulous choice of words and phrases; and his keen sense of terror and the supernatural. In poems long and short, in ballads and lyrics and even a bit of drama, Tyrrell has produced a potent little gem of weird poetry that will linger in the reader's mind long after it is finished." - S. T. Joshi, scholar of Lovecraft and editor of the magazine Spectral Realms
"Thomas Tyrrell is an architect of words, carefully planning and building each poem; a master of this genre. The subject of his poetry is truly entertaining and deserves to be widely read." - John Eliot, poet, author, columnist for SWND magazine
"Thomas Tyrell is an award-winning poet and performer, but his name will be a new one to many readers. This varied collection of seafaring poems and ballads, deceptively simple and consistently gripping, should win him many new admirers." - J Andrew Taylor, author of Walking Wounded: The Life and Poetry of Vernon Scannell
"This collection is far more than pirate pranks and shanties. Ghost aristocratic captains and gallows-fearing castaways weave their dark way through this clever concoction of stories, sharing the author's sense of literary adventure." - Sheila Schofield Large, poet, author, co-founder of Limousin Laureates