'With six hours of the poets reading their own work, the video version is a wonderful companion - or is it the other way round? - to the print version edited by Bloodaxe founder Neil Astley. Together, as a tidy package, they provide "your own personal interactive poetry festival"... In between Adcock and Zephaniah we find Helen Dunmore, Imtiaz Dharker, Selima Hill, Jackie Kay, Gwyneth Lewis, Maura Dooley, Penelope Shuttle, Jane Hirshfield and many more, captured lightly, intimately and unpretentiously, the settings as varied as the poets themselves. The initial viewing is deceptively low-key; the second is utterly moving.' - Daneet Steffens, Mslexia
'What makes In Person really special is the presence of two DVDs containing some six hours of film of these thirty poets reading their work. The films (all save the 2002 film of Ken Smith made by Ivor Bowen) are the work of Pamela Robertson-Pearce... The relaxed nature of most of the settings makes an attractive alternative to the greater sense of "performance" encountered in public readings and there are certainly insights to be had from many of the films. Hearing C.K. Williams read his long-lined poems, for example, I understood the principles of his metrics much better... There are lots of fascinating moments... This anthology ought to be distributed free to every sixth form.' - Glyn Pursglove, Acumen
'This is a magnificent birthday present to poetry lovers from Bloodaxe on the occasion of its thirtieth anniversary...If there are still any students who think, despite all our efforts, that poetry is dry, arcane and only for swots or toffs, this will disabuse them. Every institution - and every individual - who claims to care about and enjoy poetry should have a copy of this. It is a real joy.' - Frank Startup, School Librarian.
'There is no snobbery of subject or style, nor cloning of poetic type in the eclectic mix represented here. You can see what the poets look like; their ethnicity, their age, their manner of delivery - even their choice of outfit - all serve to emphasise their humanity. Their emotions are more accessible because we are able to read their faces as we listen to their words. They appear to be addressing us; the private performances recorded on the DVD feel really quite intimate. We have the poets all to ourselves; if we need to pop out to make a cup of tea they will wait for us, too... The readings bring poetry alive for us.' - Frieda Hughes, The Times