Full Description
Mark Burnhope's poems present a generous but moral quizzing of the world. Peering out over disability, faith and the host of prejudices that spring from such ground, they negotiate a path through lyricism and music, didacticism and narrative, comedy and confession, slang and slur in their search for a voice with which to speak. They visit town and sea, husband and wife and monuments to grief built of snow, steel, stone. They take us to a hydrotherapy session, a talking tree and an outcast crew including Pinocchio, Queequeg and Quasimodo. But at their heart, there is great warmth. Burnhope asks uncomfortable questions of the rhyme or reason for loss and healing, even as he challenges received perceptions of disabled life with wit, verve and an inclusive imagination.
Contents
Emoliage
The Little White Poem
To My Restored Example, Pinnochio
Wheelchair, Recast as a Site of Special Pastoral Interest
Milo Won't Go in the Water
The Ideal Bed
To My Familiar, Queequeg
To My Best-kept, Quasimodo
The Man Upstairs Drafts a Letter to the Councils
Our Jonah of Boscombe Pier
Twelve Steps towards Better Despair
Dream Invertebration
The Well and the Ceiling Rose
Queequeg (Reprise)
The Snowboy
Shinglehenge
Christogamy
The Centre
The Letting Tree
The Serpentine Verses
The House, the Church and Fisherman's Walk



