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The Island in the Sound
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05 November 2024

The Island in the Sound, the third collection by Scottish poet Niall Campbell, creates an archipelago of memories, lyrics, observations and folktales that place the small islands of his birthplace into conversation with moments from literature and history.
In this collection, mirroring the islands’ precarious future, we uncover strange links to Rome falling, Lindisfarne, and the temporary heaven found in Alamut, North Iran. The waters that churn around the islands in the poems bring strange things to their shores: saints, remnants of various types of havens, crab-boxes, and figures from the working-class lives of Uist. It is a poetry collection attuned to the growing sense that something is changing around us and there never will be a going back. These islands in the sound are what’s left: shaped, crafted, riven by the strange tuneful sea they sprang from.
Niall Campbell’s first collection, Moontide (2014), won both the £20,000 Edwin Morgan Poetry Award and the Saltire First Book of the Year Award as well as being shortlisted for three other major prizes. First Nights: poems, a selection from Moontide with additional new poems, was published by Princeton University Press in the US in 2016. His second collection, Noctuary (2019), was shortlisted for the Forward Prize for Best Collection. Born and raised on South Uist in the Outer Hebrides, he now lives in Fife. He is editor of the leading UK poetry journal Poetry London.
Shortlisted for the Forward Prize for Best Collection 2025
Longlisted for the Highland Book Prize 2024
'Niall Campbell to me reveals a rare poetic sensibility, and joyous wordsmith...allied to a singular sensitivity to mood and atmosphere. His muscular phrasing and seductive cadences give his poems a burnished quality; while his perceptions of the natural world here predominantly the land and seascape of Uist - and that of myth...interwoven with insight into his workings as a poet...instil a recurring sense of wonder.' - Stewart Conn, Edwin Morgan Poetry Award judge
‘In his meditative third collection, Campbell brings to vivid life the land and sea that defined his youth in the Outer Hebrides, interweaving references to ancient myths and the effects of climate change on the natural world and its inhabitants. […] As long as there is life on Earth, there is beauty to admire and reason to persevere, Campbell suggests. This offers an essential glimmer of hope in the dark night of the late Anthropocene.’ – Publishers Weekly
‘Everything you read, if it’s good, should change your mind. Not in terms of opinion, but the chemistry of your brain and the way it deciphers the world should be altered; if only in a small way, if only temporarily. There’s a phrase in Niall Campbell’s third collection of poetry, The Island in the Sound, about a bee: “The swelling queen quivers like a just struck match.” Each time I go to light a candle, I picture that.’ – Andrew McMillan, The Guardian (The books of my life)
'The poems in the book place his Hebridean homeland in an ever-shifting mosaic of tidal gifts, memories, folklore, conversations and people. Always there is an awareness of the sea that surrounds, that change is constant, and that there is no going back.’ – The Scotsman, Poem of the Week, on The Island in the Sound
‘Niall Campbell’s poem of love and identity finds the perfect metaphor for a sense of collective spirituality in the protean ebb and flow of the tide.’ – Steve Whitaker, Poem of the Week, Yorkshire Times, on ‘Tongues of Water’ from The Island in the Sound
‘Here are poems which pinpoint various types of ephemerality in the evolution and dissolution of ties and identities. [...] Campbell manages to voice both universal and specific instances of lost identity – be it the Trojan War, the ‘secret garden’ in 1092, or the islands’ ancient people: the cocklepickers, egg gatherers, Lighthouse keepers;’ – Hannah Stone, The Lake, on The Island in the Sound
Niall Campbell was born in 1984 on the island of South Uist, one of the Outer Hebrides of Scotland. He now lives in Fife. He received an Eric Gregory Award in 2011 and an Arvon-Jerwood Mentorship in 2013, and won the Poetry London Competition in 2013. His work has been published in a number of magazines and anthologies including, Granta, The Dark Horse, Poetry London, Poetry Review, The Salt Book of Younger Poets and Best Scottish Poems 2011. His debut pamphlet, After the Creel Fleet, was published by Happenstance Press in 2012. His first book-length collection, Moontide (Bloodaxe Books, 2014), won what was then Britain’s biggest poetry prize, the £20,000 Edwin Morgan Poetry Award, as well as the Saltire First Book of the Year Award; it was also shortlisted for the Forward Prize for Best First Collection, the Fenton Aldeburgh First Collection Prize and the Michael Murphy Memorial Prize, and was a Poetry Book Society Recommendation. First Nights: poems, a selection from Moontide with additional new poems, was published by Princeton University Press in the US in 2016. His second book-length collection, Noctuary (Bloodaxe Books, 2019), was shortlisted for the 2019 Forward Prize for Best Collection. His third full collection, The Island in the Sound (2024), was longlisted for the Highland Book Prize 2024, and shortlisted for the Forward Prize for Best Collection 2025. It is on the shortlist for Scotland's Poetry Book of the Year 2025 in The Saltires: Scotland's National Book Awards, and He wrote the libretto for Draught, an opera by Anna Appleby, which was performed by the BBC Philharmonic in 2022. In March 2024 he took over as Editor of Poetry London.
Part I
13 ‘I am so Happy. I am so Happy. I Loved my Life’
14 Apprenticeship
15 Island Sonnets: Fugay
16 The Sparrow’s Legs
17 The Night Birds
18 Inside the Trojan Horse: A War Poem
19 Tongues of Water
20 Love Letters from the Tenth Year of Marriage, letter 3
22 After the Language Deprivation Experiment
25 A Man Carrying His Own Door
26 The Night Auditor
27 Hamelin
28 Morning Lessons
29 Three Folk-tale Characters Who Are Definitely Not Metaphors for the Poem
32 Island Sonnets: Delos
33 The Death of the Birds
34 They Have Crept Down,
35 Barn Owl on Newburgh Road
36 Love Letters from the Tenth Year of Marriage, letter 6
37 A Car for Jacob
38 Island Sonnet: Eriskay
39 The Cockle-picker
40 The Salmon of All Knowledge
42 The Islander as a Theatre Barman Before the Ballet
43 An Afterlife of Those Who Build
44 The Flesh Tree
45 Island Sonnets: Sandy Island
46 Theology
47 Love Letters from the Tenth Year of Marriage, letter 4
48 The Cured
50 Pastimes
51 Island Sonnets: Lingay
52 Learning to Drink Seawater
53 Lighthouse Keeper, Believing
54 The Gift
Part II
57 Life Mask of William Blake
58 The Harpy of Rubha Meall Nan Caorach
61 Listening to the Accent of Borges
62 Houdini
63 Beginnings
65 Island Sonnets: The Poem
66 The Burning of the Bridge
67 After the Ending of the World
68 First Fires
69 From the Devil’s Songbook
70 Love Letters from the Tenth Year of Marriage, letter 2
71 Island Sonnets: Mingulay
72 The Egg Gatherers of St Kilda
73 The End of Heaven
75 On the Deep Ocean
76 Mouse
77 Love Letters from the Tenth Year of Marriage, letter 1
78 Rosemary
79 On the Bone Oracles
80 Wildness
81 Lighthouse Keeper, Doubt
82 Island Sonnets: The Shadow
83 What is the Poem?
84 Love Letters from the Tenth Year of Marriage, letter 8
86 Blackbird Psalm
87 The Transformed Fight
88 The Windows
89 The Nine Billion Names
91 The Sound
93 Acknowledgements
95 Biographical note