The Fauverie of this book is the big-cat house in the Jardin des Plantes zoo. But the word also evokes the Fauves, primitive painters who used raw colour straight from the tube. Like The Zoo Father, Petits acclaimed second collection, this volume has childhood trauma and a dying father at its heart, while Paris takes centre stage a city savage as the Amazon, haunted by Aramis the black jaguar and a menagerie of wild animals. Transforming childhood horrors to ultimately mourn a lost parent, Fauverie redeems the darker forces of human nature while celebrating the ferocity and grace of endangered species. Five poems from Fauverie won the 2013 Manchester Poetry Prize and the manuscript in progress was awarded an Arts Council England Grant for the Arts. No other British poet I am aware of can match the powerful mythic imagination of Pascale Petit. Les Murray, Times Literary Supplement Books of the Year Pascale Petit creates forms and strategies that go beyond common knowledge of what a poem can or should do; her poetry never behaves itself or betrays itself; and contemporary British poetry is all the livelier for it. David Morley, Magma