New Cemetery, Simon Armitage
New Cemetery, Simon Armitage
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New Cemetery
Poems

Author: Simon Armitage

Narrator: Simon Armitage

Unabridged: 1 hr 11 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 01/20/2026

Categories: Fiction, Poetry


Synopsis

ONE OF THE BEST POETRY BOOKS OF THE YEAR FROM THE GUARDIAN AND THE OBSERVER • From the Poet Laureate of the United Kingdom, a poem sequence that considers our use of the land that surrounds him, and recounts the personal tales of beauty and loss that play out on it

A few years ago, in the poet’s home county of West Yorkshire, the Local Authority began converting a series of cow fields near his home into a new cemetery. As the graveyard takes shape, its presence on the brow of the hill casts a lengthening shadow over the imagination and enlivens the poet’s landscape, both inner and outer. These poems, in regular, cascading tercets, sparked into being as he daily walked the site, with moorlands rising beyond it and the wind turbines of Brontë country to the north. Eventually the muddy construction scene gives way to fresh headstones and mown lawns, and, during the COVID-19 lockdown, the spectacle of gravediggers in hazmat suits. The poet retreats to write in his garden shed, charting his losses, conversing fruitfully with the dead, and engaging the world in the perilous present.

The sharply observed lyrics in New Cemetery—each fancifully named for a species of moth, a creature whose numbers the poet sees dwindling across a lifetime of night walks—remind us to turn a cool eye on the doings of man, and yet to embrace all we love while we still can, as “Time, what else,” stands “propped in a corner / like a cricket bat.”

About The Author

SIMON ARMITAGE was born in West Yorkshire and is Professor of Poetry at the University of Leeds. A recipient of numerous prizes and awards, his collections of poetry include Seeing Stars, The Unaccompanied, and his acclaimed translation of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. He writes extensively for television and radio and is the author of two novels and three nonfiction bestsellers; his theater works include The Last Days of Troy, performed at Shakespeare’s Globe in 2014. From 2015 to 2019, he served as professor of poetry at the University of Oxford, and, in 2018, he was awarded the Queen’s Gold Medal for Poetry. Simon Armitage is Poet Laureate of the United Kingdom.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Meg on January 27, 2026

Armitage seems to be very hit-or-miss for me. Some poems resonated, such as Lunar Thorn and Purple Cloud, but many did not. The sheer amount of moth imagery didn’t help, and I’ll own that this is a personal aversion (!), but it still impacted my overall enjoyment of the collection. 2.5*......more

Goodreads review by A Dreaming Bibliophile on December 18, 2025

Thanks to NetGalley and Knopf, Pantheon, Vintage and Anchor for providing me with an eARC. This was a nice collection of poems. I really liked the concept of naming the poems after moths -- most of them matched quite well. This collection to me felt like the thoughts the author had about the cemetery......more

Goodreads review by Demetri on January 20, 2026

A Hundred Small Poems, One Big Reckoning: “New Cemetery” Reviewed Watercolor Piece by Demetris Papadimitropoulos Simon Armitage’s “New Cemetery” begins, as so many endings now do, with planning permission. A field near a northern town is rezoned; an argument flares and dies; the machines arrive. The d......more

Goodreads review by Julia on November 29, 2025

I met Simon Armitage and my friend asked if he was team Edward or team Jacob but he said he hadn’t seen Twilight 💔......more


Quotes

“An exceptionally skilled poet . . . This haunting volume demonstrates the magnetic pull of a mind that has kept us, across dozens of books published since 1989, mesmerized like moths to the flame.” —Jade Cuttle, Observer

“[Armitage’s] mordantly humorous feeling for life—and death—is undiminished.” —Jeremy Noel-Tod, Prospect

“[Poems of] wit and nimbleness . . . to read them is to hear the poet laureate in dialogue with the landscape and with forebears such as Ted Hughes.” —Suzi Feay, Financial Times

“With his signature Yorkshire vernacular, [Armitage] brings precise locality and light-heartedness to death and grief . . . the poems of New Cemetery tap into deeply personal material while drawing on the laureate’s public persona.” —Kit Fan, The Guardian