Warrant Error is not just a book about the war on terror, yet neither does it seek to evade it, but to exceed it. Each sonnet in the four sets of 24 (plus 4 other poems, making a hundred) evokes a little world, as a sonnet ought, and questions it. The poems play with the expectations we have of the form, as much as they use the sonnet sequence's traditional power to switch viewpoint or attention poem by poem. Some of these look hard at the rhetoric of the war on terror and the one of terror, and, via pun, ferocious word-play and reversal, effect an interrogative unpacking more urgent even...
Warrant Error is not just a book about the war on terror, yet neither does it seek to evade it, but to exceed it. Each sonnet in the four sets of 24 (...
Paul Evans (1945-1991) was a significant member of the group of new radical poets that appeared in England in the late 1960s, but his work remains scattered through a number of small-press publications from 1970-1987 and is now entirely out of print. This Selected Poems redresses the situation and makes available a broad selection of Evans' work from throughout his career-a career that was cut tragically short by a climbing accident.
Paul Evans (1945-1991) was a significant member of the group of new radical poets that appeared in England in the late 1960s, but his work remains sca...
These new poems use tense couplets and other 'centrifugal' forms to centre their energies in nodes of impacted attention. They feature territories as dispersed as Sheppard's local City of Culture and the global city of division and political murder of the title poem.
These new poems use tense couplets and other 'centrifugal' forms to centre their energies in nodes of impacted attention. They feature territories as ...
A dozen essays on some of the most influential poets of the British post-1960 avant-garde: Tom Raworth, Allen Fisher, John Hall, Maggie O'Sullivan, Iain Sinclair, Ken Edwards, and Bob Cobbing, together with reflections on the mid-70s Poetry Society coup and counter-coup.
A dozen essays on some of the most influential poets of the British post-1960 avant-garde: Tom Raworth, Allen Fisher, John Hall, Maggie O'Sullivan, Ia...
Robert Sheppard has given this book over to his own invention, the fictional Belgian poet Rene Van Valckenborch. Apparently writing in both Flemish and Walloon, and translated and edited by entities as shadowy (and dodgy) as himself, Van Valckenborch's split oeuvre derives from the linguistic and cultural divide within contemporary Belgium. By the time Van Valckenborch disappears into poetic silence he seems an enigma of his own making, a comic figure with tragic attributes, a mystery to all swept up in his apparition. When his story is finished he leaves behind the deliberately discontinuous...
Robert Sheppard has given this book over to his own invention, the fictional Belgian poet Rene Van Valckenborch. Apparently writing in both Flemish an...
Features texts written and assembled as a time-based project between 1989 and the end of the twentieth century. This volume focuses on the alternative history of the twentieth century. It includes a book-length text on the paintings of Jack B Yeats, as well as a number of shorter pieces.
Features texts written and assembled as a time-based project between 1989 and the end of the twentieth century. This volume focuses on the alternative...