Brand New Ancients

Published in 2013
64 pages

epub


Kae Tempest (formerly Kate Tempest; born 22 December 1985) is an English spoken word performer, poet, recording artist, novelist and playwright. At the age of 16, they were accepted into the exclusive BRIT School for Performing Arts and Technology in Croydon. In 2013, they won the Ted Hughes Award for their work Brand New Ancients. They were named a Next Generation Poet by the Poetry Book Society, a once-a-decade accolade. Their albums Everybody Down and Let Them Eat Chaos have been nominated for the Mercury Music Prize. The latter’s accompanying poetry book (also titled Let Them Eat Chaos) was nominated for the Costa Book of the Year in the Poetry Category. Their debut novel The Bricks That Built the Houses was a Sunday Times bestseller and won the 2017 Books Are My Bag Readers Award for Breakthrough Author. They were nominated as Best Female Solo Performer at the 2018 Brit Awards.

What is this book about?
Yes, the gods are on the park bench, the gods are on the bus, / The gods are all here, the gods are in us. / The gods are timeless, fearless, fighting to be bold, / conviction is a heavy hand to hold, / grip it, winged sandals tearing up the pavement — / you, me, everyone: Brand New Ancients.

Kae Tempest’s words in Brand New Ancients are written to be read aloud; the book combines poem, rap, and humanist sermon, by turns tender and fierce. Set in Southeast London, Brand New Ancients finds the mythic in the mundane. It is the story of two half-brothers, Thomas and Clive, unknown to each other — Thomas the result of an affair between his mother and Clive’s father. Tempest, with wide-ranging empathy, takes us inside the passionless marriage of Jane and Kevin — the man who suspects Thomas is not his son, but loves him just the same — and the neighboring home of Mary and Brian, where betrayal has not been so placidly accepted. The sons of these two households — quiet, creative Thomas and angry, destructive Clive — will cross paths in adolescence, their fates converging with mortal fury.

These characters’ loves, their infidelities, their disappointments and their small comforts — these, Tempest argues, are timeless. Our lives and our choices are no less important than those of history and myth. Awarded the Ted Hughes Award for New Work in Poetry, Brand New Ancients insists on our importance as individuals — and asserts Kae Tempest’s importance as a talent impossible to ignore.