Paul Farley
Judge Wendy Cope writes: "Pleasure is by no means an infallible critical guide", wrote Auden in one of his essays, "but it is the least fallible". As I read and re-read nine sets of poems, I noticed that I was looking forward to Paul Farley's entry coming round again. Each time it did, I grew more convinced that this was the prizewinner. There were some interesting and enjoyable poems among the other entries, but there were more of them in Farley's.
I was especially taken with a monologue spoken by a light bulb left burning in a deserted house. And I liked the poet's nostalgic reflections on treacle, potatoes, hot-metal printing, the names of paper-sizes. There is street-cred too, for those who require it, in poems on a rave, a late-night city, the silence at the beginning of a football match. Farley handles all these subjects with confidence. His skilled in his use of form and of rhyme and half-rhyme. He knows when and how to stop.