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9781804944950 69c51f06a181104547c244ca The Possibility Of Tenderness https://www.midlandbookshop.com/s/607fe93d7eafcac1f2c73ea4/69c51f07a181104547c244dc/81gw9d0xbhl-_sl1500_.jpg

SHORTLISTED FOR THE 2025 WAINWRIGHT PRIZE FOR NATURE WRITING
AN OBSERVER BOOK OF THE YEAR 2025

'The most exquisitely written meditation on family, childhood, and nature' 
BERNARDINE EVARISTO
'An extraordinary, necessary book' ROBERT MACFARLANE
'Hold it in your hands and then dream of the green world' MONIQUE ROFFEY
'Surprising at every turn and rewarding in ways you never expect' MARLON JAMES
'A masterclass on how to write place, dreams and memory into being' OLIVE SENIOR

The Possibility of Tenderness is a personal history narrated through the lens of the ‘grung’ and plants. It’s also a people’s history of the land, a family saga, an archival detective story through time. It’s the migration tale of a young scholar who arrives in Britain from rural Jamaica to study at Oxford to achieve ‘upward social mobility’ and who now lives in Roundhay Leeds. Suddenly, amidst his journey of dreams and class aspiration, the plants and people of his native district, Coffee Grove, begin to offer different ways of living, alternative dreams, and the possibility of tenderness and the permission to roam England.

Marrying the local and the familial with global history and unfolding as a timely and immersive tale of land, environment, and the world of plants, The Possibility of Tenderness reveals how the history of a tiny rural village in a mountainous region of Jamaica is interlinked with that of modern Britain. And, also what that rural village can teach us about leisure, land ownership and reclamation today.

Mama, the author’s grandmother, is a central protagonist of the story. Alongside her, herbalists, plant workers, farmers, and plant lovers help forge an intimate portrait of Coffee Grove, as do the plants themselves; fever grass, jointa, search mi heart, leaf of life, helping Allen-Paisant revise his sense of self and solidify a new understanding of his place in the world.

The Possibility of Tenderness is a cross-pollinating book about the transformative power of plants, the legacy of dreams, and the lessons they offer for living with the earth.

 
 
 

About the Author

Jason Allen-Paisant is a Jamaican writer and multi-award-winning poet. He is the author of two critically acclaimed books of poetry, Thinking with Trees and Self-Portrait as Othello, which won the UK’s two most prestigious poetry awards for 2023 - the Forward Prize and T.S. Eliot Prize. He is also a Professor of Critical Theory and Creative Writing at the University of Manchester and Associate Editor of Callaloo Literary Journal. Jason lives in Leeds with his partner and two children.
9781804944950
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The Possibility Of Tenderness

The Possibility Of Tenderness

ISBN: 9781804944950
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Details
  • ISBN: 9781804944950
  • Author: Jason Allen-paisant
  • Publisher: Penguin Books
  • Pages: 244
  • Format: Paperback
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Book Description

SHORTLISTED FOR THE 2025 WAINWRIGHT PRIZE FOR NATURE WRITING
AN OBSERVER BOOK OF THE YEAR 2025

'The most exquisitely written meditation on family, childhood, and nature' 
BERNARDINE EVARISTO
'An extraordinary, necessary book' ROBERT MACFARLANE
'Hold it in your hands and then dream of the green world' MONIQUE ROFFEY
'Surprising at every turn and rewarding in ways you never expect' MARLON JAMES
'A masterclass on how to write place, dreams and memory into being' OLIVE SENIOR

The Possibility of Tenderness is a personal history narrated through the lens of the ‘grung’ and plants. It’s also a people’s history of the land, a family saga, an archival detective story through time. It’s the migration tale of a young scholar who arrives in Britain from rural Jamaica to study at Oxford to achieve ‘upward social mobility’ and who now lives in Roundhay Leeds. Suddenly, amidst his journey of dreams and class aspiration, the plants and people of his native district, Coffee Grove, begin to offer different ways of living, alternative dreams, and the possibility of tenderness and the permission to roam England.

Marrying the local and the familial with global history and unfolding as a timely and immersive tale of land, environment, and the world of plants, The Possibility of Tenderness reveals how the history of a tiny rural village in a mountainous region of Jamaica is interlinked with that of modern Britain. And, also what that rural village can teach us about leisure, land ownership and reclamation today.

Mama, the author’s grandmother, is a central protagonist of the story. Alongside her, herbalists, plant workers, farmers, and plant lovers help forge an intimate portrait of Coffee Grove, as do the plants themselves; fever grass, jointa, search mi heart, leaf of life, helping Allen-Paisant revise his sense of self and solidify a new understanding of his place in the world.

The Possibility of Tenderness is a cross-pollinating book about the transformative power of plants, the legacy of dreams, and the lessons they offer for living with the earth.

 
 
 

About the Author

Jason Allen-Paisant is a Jamaican writer and multi-award-winning poet. He is the author of two critically acclaimed books of poetry, Thinking with Trees and Self-Portrait as Othello, which won the UK’s two most prestigious poetry awards for 2023 - the Forward Prize and T.S. Eliot Prize. He is also a Professor of Critical Theory and Creative Writing at the University of Manchester and Associate Editor of Callaloo Literary Journal. Jason lives in Leeds with his partner and two children.

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