Niall Campbell Reviews & Features

Niall Campbell Reviews & Features

 

Noctuary is a homage to night-time, to “that midnight thrill of being alive”, to the small, stray moments that make up a life. It is also a passionately tender examination of what it means to have and care for a small child.’ – Suzannah V. Evans, Times Literary Supplement 
 

Scottish poet Niall Campbell, whose debut Moontide won both the Saltire First Book of the Year Award and the inaugural £20,000 Edwin Morgan Poetry Award, published his second collection Noctuary with Bloodaxe in April 2019. His third collection The Island in the Sound, will be published in September 2024.

Noctuary is a lyrical collection poems about young fatherhood and the small hours. Written from Niall Campbell’s then home in Leeds, the poems nevertheless draw on the seascapes, myths and wildlife of South Uist, where he grew up. In this noctuary, a diary for the late hours, poems record moments of beauty and tenderness to be found in those broken nights when caring for a young son.

Listen to Niall Campbell narrate a poem he wrote especially for the Radio 4 feature Ballad of the Fix, about Scotland's drug problem, here. This was a BBC Radio 4 Pick of the Week.

 

NIALL CAMPBELL INTERVIEWED ON LANTERN SCOTTISH POETRY PODCAST

Lantern Scottish Poetry - Inheritance: Niall Campbell, podcast released 15 December 2023

Niall Campbell was interviewed for the first live recording of the Lantern Scottish Poetry podcast.  It was recorded in front of an audience at the Push the Boat Out festival in Edinburgh in November 2023.  

Niall read poems from his two Bloodaxe collections and discussed about homes and poetic homes with podcast hosts Ally Heather and Scotland’s Makar Kathleen Jamie. He also spoke about growing up on South Uist in the Outer Hebrides. Niall read '‘The Letter Always Arrives at its Destination’' and ‘The Work’ from Moontide, and ‘The Night Watch’ and ‘Good Night’ from Noctuary.

‘Multi-award winning poet Niall Campbell joins Scottish Makar Kathleen Jamie and host Alistair Heather on stage at the poetry festival 2023. Our theme is inheritance and tradition.’

Poems from Moontide featured at the top of the episode, and Niall read his poems from Noctuary from 18:15.

https://open.spotify.com/episode/1kkt7YHnIKU76bs0tuBq9z

NIALL CAMPBELL PRESENTS BBC RADIO 3's THE ESSAY

The Essay: An Turas / The Journey, BBC Radio 3, Wednesday 15 November 2023, 10.45pm

Scottish poet Niall Campbell presented and contributed to special edition of BBC Radio 3’s The Essay featuring five writers from Scotland, who all narrated a piece in their own language or dialect (with no translation).  

Niall Campbell now lives in Fife, but was brought up on the island of South Uist in the Outer Hebrides. He recorded this piece for BBC Radio 3 on the island, looking out to sea – or The Sound, as it is known. In his forthcoming third collection The Island in the Sound, out in September 2024, Niall returns to South Uist, which was the inspiration for much of his award-winning debut collection Moontide.

The other four writers were Rahat Zahid, speaking in Urdu from Glasgow, Len Pennie in Scots from Fife, Peter MacKay in his native Gaelic from Edinburgh, and Mae Diansangu, speaking from Aberdeen in the Doric dialect of north east Scotland.

‘Five celebrated writers from around Scotland sit at their nearest window and share, in their own language or dialect, what they can see and how it makes them feel about their homeland. This immersive audio collage takes us on a tour of modern Scotland's plurality of languages, dialects and cultures. Niall Campbell of Hebridean South Uist lets his eyes scan the waters of his island, and his mind wander beneath the waves. He considers, in English, the Norse influence in the naming of his surroundings.’   

This beautiful multi-lingual audio feature will remain available on BBC Sounds. Listen here.
 

NIALL CAMPBELL POEM SET TO MUSIC FOR THE BBC RADIO 3 CAROL COMPETITION

Breakfast, BBC Radio 3, BBC Radio 3 Carol Competition & The Friday Poem, Friday 16 December 2022 & Friday 23 December, 6.30am-9am

The 2022 BBC Radio 3 Carol Competition invited listeners to set a tune to a specially commissioned poem by award-winning poet Niall Campbell.  Gareth Malone and fellow judges Ed Balls, YolanDa Brown, Anna Lapwood and Manvinder Rattan chose a shortlist of six carols from nearly a thousand submissions.  The settings were harmonised by the husband-and-wife duo of Joanna Forbes L'Estrange and Alexander L’Estrange.

The BBC Singers were in the studio at Maida Vale on 16 December to perform the six shortlisted carols live on Radio 3's Breakfast. Listeners were invited to vote online for their favourite setting. The winner was announced on Breakfast on Friday 23 December 2022 and was performed live by the BBC Singers.  Winner Maurice Walters was interviewed down the line from York.

For The Friday Poem on 16 December, a recording was played of Naill Campbell reading his new poem ‘The Winter’s Brightening’, which has been set to music for the competition this year.  It was described later by conductor Bob Chilcott as ‘a particularly lovely poem – it’s got lots of atmosphere’.

The text of Niall Campbell’s commissioned poem ‘The Winter’s Brightening’ and audio of him reading it, along with audio of all six shortlisted carols, are here.

~~~~
 

REVIEW COVERAGE FOR NOCTUARY

 

Times Literary Supplement, Friday 17 April 2020

‘Following on from the inky darkness of Niall Campbell’s first collection Moontide (2014), set by the shores of the Outer Hebrides, Noctuary is a homage to night-time, to “that midnight thrill of being alive”, to the small, stray moments that make up a life. It is also a passionately tender examination of what it means to have and care for a small child.’ – Suzannah V. Evans, Times Literary Supplement 

Available in full by subscription via the TLS website here.
 

Scotland on Sunday, Sunday 5 May 2019

An in-depth review of Niall Campbell’s second collection Noctuary ran in Scotland on Sunday. Roger Cox praises Niall Campbell’s ‘careful, crafted, lyrical’ poems.

‘A noctuary is a night journal and many of the poems here feel as if they have been written in the strange, dreamlike state between sleeping and waking… rich, ambiguous allusions only heighten the sense of the poet’s confused, half-conscious state, his mind ping-ponging from one idea to the next.’ – Roger Cox, Scotland on Sunday

Click here to read the full review.



The Yorkshire Times, online Wednesday 1 May 2019

An in-depth review of Niall Campbell’s second collection Noctuary was featured in the regional online newspaper The Yorkshire Times on 1 May.

‘Many of Campbell’s fine poems are ruminations on the difficulties and rewards of new fatherhood. And, to shamelessly plunder a much-overused critical conceit, they are irresistibly luminous, which is to say that they give off a steady light in introspection. A city-dweller originally from the remote Hebridean island of South Uist, Campbell perceives relationships through the kaleidoscopic glass of landscapes current and remembered...In truth, there is so much of enduring value in Noctuary that the reader struggles to climb out of the amniotic water.’ – Steve Whitaker, The Yorkshire Times

Read the full review here.
 

POEM FEATURE


The Island Review, online Friday 26 April 2019

Two poems from Niall Campbell’s second collection Noctuary were featured on The Island Review to mark publication. The poems featured are ‘Crusoe, One Year on the Island’ and ‘February Morning’.

‘Written from his new home in Leeds, Campbell records with lyrical beauty and tenderness the experience of young fatherhood. He draws on the seascapes, myths and wildlife of South Uist, the island where he grew up which featured heavily in Moontide, his debut collection and recipient of the Saltire First Book of the Year Award and the inaugural Edwin Morgan Poetry Award.’ – The Island Review

Click here to see the feature.


[22 April 2020]


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