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Drew Milne
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Drew Milne

The Damage


New and Selected Poems
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Biographical note:  Drew Milne was born in Edinburgh, Scotland 1964. His books include Sheet Mettle (1994), How Peace Came (1994), Songbook (1996), Bench Marks (1998), As It Were (1998), familiars (1999), Pianola (2000) and The Gates of Gaza (2000). He has been a lecturer at the universities of Edinburgh and Sussex, and is the Judith E. Wilson Lecturer in Drama and Poetry, Faculty of English, University of Cambridge. He edits Parataxis Editions, and the journal Parataxis: modernism and modern writing.

 

BIC Basic

EAN13:  9781876857110
ISBN-10:  1876857110
ISBN-13:  9781876857110
Author:  Drew Milne
Title:  The Damage
Series:  Salt Modern Poets
Product class:  BC
Language:  eng
Audience:  General/trade
BIC subject category:  CTCH1
Publisher:  Salt Publishing
Pub date:  01-Nov-01
Extent:  128pp
Height:  216 mm
Width:  140 mm
Thickness:  8 mm
Weight:  192 gms
Supplier:   Gardners Books
Supplier:   Ingram Book Group
Supplier:   Inbooks (James Bennett)
Availability:  IP
Price:  GBP 7.95
Price:  USD 12.95
Rights:  World

 

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PAPERBACK

 

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spacer Short description/annotation:  Milne’s new book, The Damage offers a broad selection & daring new works. Recently featured in Keith Tuma’s “Anthology of 20th-Century British and Irish Poetry”, and known as a Marxist critic (working with Terry Eagleton), Milne writes poems that range from cheeky pop song riffs to challenges to the worlds of IT, science & capitalism.

 

Main description:  The Damage: New and Selected Poems offers an up-beat selection from Milne’s emerging oeuvre. Along with excerpts from the earlier works Sheet Mettle and Bench Marks, this edition offers a new version of How Peace Came, the art installation made with Andrew James, which is featured on the jacket illustration. Artistic collaboration informs a number of poems in dialogue with music, sculpture and pop lyricism, but this selection also includes a number of surprises, such as the occasional poem “Epithalamion” and a homage to Vladimir Mayakovsky. As well as collecting the pamphlets Songbook, As it Were and Familiars, the new works made available here for the first time include two longer sequences, [sic] and sweeping new measures, which push and pull at the envelopes of contemporary perception. Milne’s work can be read through his critical writings, which argue for a reworking of Hegel and Marx, or through his interest in the wittier ends of modernism, a mischievous impulse evident in the collection Pig Cupid. Although often associated with Cambridge poets such as J.H.Prynne and John Wilkinson, this collection also reveals a distinctive Scottish edge. The sequence ‘Aggropolis’, first published in “Edinburgh Review”, reworks the roadblocks put up around Scottish lyric by Hugh MacDiarmid. More recent poems in this collection suggest friskier dialogues with poetic notes associated with Samuel Beckett, Frank O’Hara, Mina Loy, or Tom Raworth. The damaged goods of contemporary capitalism are rarely far from view, but there is a lyric insouciance that cuts through Milne’s wounded provocations.

 

Table of contents:
Dolphin Song
Daymares
Through the buy-out jargon
Positive Indiscriminations
In Memoriam Joseph Beuys
Lullay
Quite Contrary
Gloss
Accidents
A still life in blue
A modest preposition
A Garden of Tears
How Peace Came
Aggropolis
Tadpole Men
Double Yellow
Night Night
Tome
As It Were
Epithalamion
familiars
Troubadour Unbound
The Prince of Bad Air
Amis comme cochons
Seasonal Greetings
Cut to the Quick
100 Days of Mammon
Ostrich Takes Off
Homage to Mayakovsky
Smooch-Punk Fusion
[sic]
sweeping new measures

 

View excerpt as PDF:

PDF Click here to view a sample (68 KB)

 

Excerpt from book:  

Through the buy-out jargon

I am virus soul corp, hug me to this unreal
viral city which had not thought, death undone, so
short term many fun-funding were this captive class;

for our soul libidinal pulsations referred,
hush fund breezes cyclone my well-products esquire,
or are greenfield ventures as this stock cubism falls.

I am aid pack, cash-crop and pearl mint tax heaven
with airs, seedcorns, graces skeltering pro or fits,
yours contumely, or old use-value as am used;

but cashing chips one in, figaro appliqué,
these now machine tools bitter this dream crop decor,
appellation cash vortex, wonders contrôlée,

as atrium hollows words which do not pass go.

 

Review quote:  A substantial collection of poetry … left-leaning yet awkwardly playful, mixing ethical concern with fantastic energy and formal device.… Milne sings, puzzles, suggests and takes lyricism to new places.

Steve Spence
Terrible Work

 

Review quote:  … At their best, these poems, teetering on the edge of the communicable, offer a delightful playful surface, as if unexpected words had somehow slipped into someone else’s structures.

Tony Frazer
Shearsman

 

Review quote:  … gloriously Apocalyptic … Milne’s most vulnerable characteristic, his almost bardic intensity, is actually what I find most admirable …

James Keery
P.N. Review

 

Review quote:  We get a full set of warnings as well as a strong charge to the batteries. The circuit of a trapped intellection, fuelled by passion for clarity and outcome but hedged by the current limits of investment in the language market (loanback, I suppose), maps out an uncomfortable place with a corrective ferocity …

J.H. Prynne

 

Review quote:  Milne isn’t a million miles from the techno-Situationism of The KLF.… Perhaps his genius is really comic.… The technique is like sampling, and The Apes of God …

Andrew Duncan

 

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