Loop of Jade

Loop of Jade is the first book of poetry by Chinese-British poet Sarah Howe, and the first debut collection to ever win the T. S. Eliot Prize, in 2015.

[1][2][3] A review from The Scotsman, "In her poem Sirens, Sarah Howe writes 'I had one of those blurrings – glitch, then focus – / like a put-off optician’s trip, when you realize / how long you’ve been seeing things wrongly.'

This sinuous, shimmering, mirage-like debut collection is littered with such moments of sudden realisation, and also haunted by the suspicion that there must be more to everything than meets the eye."

Saying that the poet, Sarah Howe, combines her Chinese-British heritage along with her love for writing and the outcome is something both memorable and something we aren't used to.

“'The twin lids / of the black lacquer box / open away', writes Howe in 'Mother’s Jewellery Box': 'a moonlit lake / ghostly lotus leaves / unfurl in tiers // silver chains / careful o’s and a’s / in copperplate" This sets the tone early on in the poem and depending on the reader's taste can be seen as "graceful or, decorative and over-designed.