Full Description
Bodypopping Belgians and bicycle couriers populate a world of public fountains and archaeological debris in this original and eclectic collection by James Wilkes.
Weather A System includes poems, found text, scripts, ephemera and imaginary reviews; subversive broadcasts that cut through the 'civil drizzle' of contemporary life. Wilkes' work excavates the present, looting and salvaging to craft an innovative, playful and multi-dimensional poetics. Weather A System captures shifts of weather, power and fashion: an energetic and darkly witty intervention in an eroded culture.
"James Wilkes views the city 24/7 from a podium of his own. When he talks he talks quickly, capturing the details that pedestrians miss: the shuffle of clothes, the background tracks. His ambition is to move with the flaneurial swagger that knows the city is always subject to the ever-shifting weather. Through the commuter and traffic crush, as the crowds run for cover, the poet exposes himself under 'a cavernous pigeon sky'. Because the forecasts for gloom were long since predicted by himself his energy never flags and his wit doesn't err. It's Apollinaire's rain that runs through his ink though he opts instead to leave the Little Car behind and send by courier. Where others find congestion and grime Wilkes cuts between the parnassian dead freights, weaving the forms that function for now: reviews, questionnaries, plays. 'Who would not want to glamorize these fast people?'."
Chris McCabe
"The eagerly anticipated new collection by James Wilkes does not disappoint. It has genuine range and depth, is ambitious in scope and artfully enjoys the possibilities and playfulness of discourse. 'The Review Pages' section in particular reverberates beyond its beguiling humour and the 'Collected Civil Ephemera' gleans a sure psycho-geographical harvest. There is much to savour in this stimulating and inspiring collection. I thoroughly recommend a poem a day."
David Caddy
"Wilkes keeps his 'ethereal cannonade' going right through to the end, gathering up the debris of weather reports and fashion shows alike and reassembling them into tottering word-sculptures, ransacking everything from books to pub chatter for pieces which he can fit together into some out-of-control jigsaw. [...] this is a book where the pleasure is in the technicolour range of the language and the urgent sense of not quite being there."
Jon Stone
James Wilkes was born in Poole in 1980. A graduate of Oxford University and UEA, he has taught English in Japan and writes art criticism. Interior Traces, a radio drama about brain imaging technologies, was broadcast in 2009. His previous publications include Ex Chaos, A DeTour (both Renscombe Press, 2006) and Reviews (Burner Veer, 2009). A selection of his work was included in the anthology Generation Txt (Penned in the Margins, 2006). In 2008 he started a PhD on the construction of landscape in the Isle of Purbeck.
Contents
Part One: Collected Civil Ephemera Medical Questionnaire "Clear Sky" Anticyclone: Winter Spring-Summer Collection Carousel Europa Some Theatrical Branches of the Muse's Vine, Which Are Legitimate Topics of Poetry Four Variations on the Same Midwinter Part Two: The Review Pages Griet Hannay, 8 Little Curtain Rings Robert Steinbeck, The Leaping Pebble Mary Dundhed, The Art of the Kilim Kelly Hobbs, Inner Glassware Mahindra Gupta, Mela Tales Chris Shaker, A Dollar and a Half a Day: The Diaries of Isaac Carpenter, Midshapman (ed.) John Seesman, Caliphate Pop Gareth Jenkins, Handles Brusquely Celia Fenchurch, 'Experiments in Living Now', and Ella Solinsky, Elements Provisoires Linda Hadley and Edwin Hak, 6 London Fountains Pieter Peeters, Delta Blueprints Part Three: Three Purbeck Poems Approaching Cleavel Point Vanishing Points: Arne Restless Letters: A Response to Eric Benfield Part Four: Scripts and Transcripts London Bridge; or, A Postal for 3 Voices Try Enter Doss Fountain Transcript #3 63 Fountain Transcript #4 70 Fountain Transcript #5