Reviews'Like a deep Summer meadow, thrumming in wet light,
Bloom teems with wild, restless energy: bird song, flowers, birth and death, the body in its ecstasy and decay. Sarah Westcott's beautiful poems pivot upon a strange dazzling curiosity. They urge us to kneel in the long grass and pay tender attention to the spaces within nature and within ourselves where life blooms.'
Liz Berry
'Sarah Westcott's poems are an enquiry into perception, in which looking is refracted, and the line between subject and object becomes permeable. They look back to a time when form and perception were ... the same, and trace the contours and textures of loss, the way longing sets birds circling, and green is inconsolable. And yet elegy is not the only key: there are celebrations, too, exhilarations of surface, colour, voices on and in the body.
Bloom brings the human and its various others - the weathers, weeds, flowers and creatures - into delicate focus, attending to their forms and relationships with tender precision and care.'
Mina Gorji
'Sarah Westcott in her second poetry collection
Bloom, picks up where she left off with Slant Light; at once fully immersed in the natural world, and yet devastatingly unable to escape the body, its attendant implications of mortality, humanity, in a world that renders us tiny.'
Juliano Zaffino
'Westcott blends dynamic, sensual language with the scientific [...] the poet-narrator of
Bloom seems to almost bodily flow, meld and join with the natural world. [...] This second of the Westcott's 'sister' collections shows us a powerful nature poet unafraid of a bolder reach in expression, where we are 'one layer of carbon' (The Turn) among so many others in nature, but one grounded in the particularity and exactitude of that world.'
Ken Evans,
The Manchester Review'Wescott create[s] a palimpsest of hymns to the natural world [...]
Bloom is a subtle meditation on the underlying connection between humans and Nature with ecological overtones, rooted in passionate, precise observation.'
Theresa Sowerby,
Orbis Magazine'[Wescott] invokes moments of sanctity which have meaning for her without invoking theology. In this wide context, she reads as both eco-poet and love poet. What makes her an eco-poet (not strident but urgent) is her respect for life. [...] Because she often strikes a note of fine spontaneity, it would be easy to overlook that Westcott is a clever technician and witty with it. Several love-poems here are down-to-earth, high-flown and tender all in one. [...] Awareness of touch, of one texture against another, is an insidious (in a good sense) presence through poems which are invariably sensual at one level or another; she is also, however, making a point about the need to feel, the 'civilisation' that comes from a trembling awareness. '
Dilys Wood,
Artemis Poetry'Sarah Westcott's keen-eyed second collection,
Bloom, deals in surfaces that shift, cut and resist. [...] It is a particular gift of Westcott's poems to connect directly with an animal nature that can slip past intellectual overlay. [...] These are poems that capture a sense of the things that are 'bewildering', 'tender' [...] Wescott reveals the multiplicity of our experience, its many truths. This is a mesmerising volume that invites us to rove, and in so doing, to leave a different track behind.'Lesley Sharpe,
The Alchemy Spoon'The poems in this luminous book are tight, fragmented things, varying in shape and typesetting, in a style both abstract and committed: the world placed firmly underfoot even as the work revels in strangeness and uncertainty. [...] There's something original about Westcott's nature writing, something unsettling, where clarity of observation is never far from an obsessive sense of derangement. Maybe that's because hallucination and actually seeing are closer to one another than we might think: our interiors influence our perception of the exterior. [...] The world is always rolling in this collection, brought to life by Westcott's quick but careful observations: in flux and subjected to harmonious processes, always in bloom.'
Daniel Bennett,
Wild Court'With humility, reflectiveness, and careful attunement to her surroundings, Westcott calls for her readers to stop and contemplate the wonders of the natural world. Her language is tender and vivid. [...] These poems describe ordinary moments made noteworthy by the poet's good eye and deft imagery. All beginnings are naive, she writes, and, in this collection, her curiosity proves contagious.'Maggie Wang,
Harvard Review'Eerie and sensuous ... Westcott's poems seek to collapse the differences between human and non-human entities in order to show how human beings can contain multitudes'
Dzifa Benson,
Magma Poetry'When we read Westcott we know ourselves, instantly, to be in another world, flowering... She is a deeply instinctive poet, at ease in her own poetical character... Westcott has a way of dissolving boundaries between self and other, self and world, self and time, so that any reader of hers must end up feeling: I want to be this way all the time. The word I want here is an over-used and badly understood one: natural. Reading Bloom makes one ache for that naturalness, but also, and this is rare, gives us a portal, a way of finding it.' Nichola Deane
'Skilful patterning, sharp observation, sensuous evocativeness and startling leaps of metaphorical imagination give her poems a vivid, immediate impact, absorbing the reader in the experiences they present.' Edmund Prestwich, London Grip