Full Description
Original, inventive,
with linguistic somersaults taking centre stage on every page. Who'd imagine a humble scarecrow being
raised to such literary heights? Chris Sparkes has created a heart-felt tour de
force in his Life in the Day of Yevich Romanov. Scaretits, hold on tight to
your straw hats! Maggie Sawkins
A feast of tactile rhythms and chewy language.
Oracular lines of poetry flow in a vernacular speech spiced with grandeur,
honouring a great resonant subject, the birth of perhaps a redeemer.
Extraordinary.
George Marsh
Epic poetry might be considered
a prehistoric art form, the stuff of long dead white authors, such as Homer,
Virgil, Dante and Milton, the dread and terror of English A level students. It
is no accident that much of such epic poetry takes place physically in the
realms of the dead, with visitations to Hades forming key components of The
Odyssey, The Aeneid, The Divine Comedy, and, of course, Paradise Lost. In his
new work Christopher Sparkes seeks to revive the Epic and imbue it with the
breath of modern life, much as the 19thFrench poet Baudelaire exhorted
pictorial artists to abandon the customary fêtes galantes, relegate them
to the Neiges d'antan ofVillon, and focus instead on the rich seam of
potential offered by the dynamic vibrancy of modern life.