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Simon Smith

London Bridge

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Biographical note:  Simon Smith, born 1961 in Redruth, Cornwall, brought up on the borders of Hertfordshire and Essex. Educated at the University of Kent at Canterbury, he lived in Pennsylvania from 1984-1986 where he threw in an academic career for one in librarianship. He has worked at the Poetry Library in London since 1991, and became Librarian in 2003. He edited GRIllE (1991-1993) and was poetry editor of Angel Exhaust (1998-1999). He is one of the judges for the National Poetry Competition 2004 along with Elaine Feinstein, Ciaran Carson and chair Denis MacShane, the Minister for Europe.

 

BIC Basic

EAN13:  9781844714902
ISBN:  9781844714902
Author:  Simon Smith
Title:  London Bridge
Series:  Salt Modern Poets
Product class:  BC
Language:  eng
Audience:  General/trade
BIC subject category:  CTCH1
Publisher:  Salt Publishing
Pub date:  15-Jun-10
Extent:  80pp
Height:  216 mm
Width:  140 mm
Thickness:  5 mm
Weight:  120 gms
Supplier:   Gardners Books
Supplier:   Ingram Book Group
Supplier:   Inbooks (James Bennett)
Availability:  IP
Price:  GBP 9.99
Price:  USD 15.95
Rights:  World

 

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Short description/annotation:  London Bridge, Simon Smith’s fourth collection of poetry, is an accessible, funny and immediate book of poems about life in the City amidst the contingent camera-shake and confusions of the everyday. The book concentrates on the experience of living in London – a book which is accessible, contemporary and sassy.

 

Main description:  London Bridge is Simon Smith’s fourth collection of poetry, and his third with Salt. New to this accessible book is the way each poem can stand-alone or feature as part of the main sequence, a sequence which has its roots, with its author, in the place and mindscape of South East London. This book is a new development for Smith, explicitly locating the poems in the geography and history of this almost bypassed corner of the Capital, taking in the ghost traces of Blitz bomb damage; the everyday life of the Old Kent Road and A2 grafted over the first arrival of tramping Roman legions; the ghost of Robert Browning; and Telegraph Hill, the navigation point for airliners, holidaymakers, terrorists and business people into Gatwick and Heathrow. This collection continues too the humour and wit of Reverdy Road and Mercury with a nod towards the New York School, via the world of virtual reality and the vogue for poetry anthologies, as well as the incisive precisions of e.e. cummings or William Carlos Williams.

Versions of poetry from other languages also figure in London Bridge. The Orpheus and Eurydice story is revisited in Rilke’s re-telling; a translation of Apollinaire’s last poem, ‘The Auburn Stunner’ appears tracing the junctures and disjunctures of war and love; and the poems on the death of children by the Roman poet Martial lend a darker vein and further dimension to the collection.

This is a book that sifts and collects the data of a life lived in the City amidst the immediate and contingent camera-shake and confusions of the everyday.

 

Table of contents:
On Telegraph Hill
Address
Martial, Book I Poem 7
CCTV
Ode on a Grecian Urn
Bob’s Day
Online O.E.D.
That Love Thing
A 53 or a 172
Personal Note
Michael
Anniversaries
‘Bye, bye’
Green Shield Stamps
Stereogram
Orpheus. Eurydice. Hermes.
‘A’ for Apple
In the ‘On’ Position
Imagist Poem
Operating System
Fish Cake
Woodpecker
Martial, Book V Poem 20
Fly By Night
Board Games
1984
Deep Breath
Red Dots
Choo-choo
Converse
Martial, Book V Poem 34
Least Most
Il Penseroso
Rather Like Orchestration
Oyster Card
Designs
Martial, Book V Poem 37
Moment
About the Mountain
Honeymoon
History of the Good
The Auburn Stunner
Goering
Open Browser
Tryst
Self-Portrait in a Bathroom Mirror
Martial, Book X Poem 47
Puerile Allegations
Questions of Beauty
Two Times Table
The English Peacemaker
Hurdy Gurdy Man
First Idea
Objects of Desire
Text
How They Brought the Good News from Ghent to Aix
Martial, Book X poem 61
A Table

 

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Unpublished endorsement:  The occupants of Simon Smith’s poems are names for contemporary urban detail ratcheted up to experiential intensities that actually open (rather than shut down, as all too customary) the reader’s senses of place and person. The “mesh” is thereby not amiss, nor are these “Great buckets of Reality” hoisted to no purpose. A rare pleasure found so succinctly in the telling. As Smith’s refresher take on Martial has it, “Wouldn’t every man live, if he knew how,/Giving it all away to here and now?”

Bill Berkson

 

Unpublished endorsement:  Simon Smith has an instinct for unexpected forms which wring from his language memorable registers and tones. His imagination is musical, deliberate, generously impersonal. His translations attest to the deep connection and continuity of his work, underpinning its novelty with a classical authority wryly conceded.

Michael Schmidt

 

Unpublished endorsement:  Robert Browning lived at the foot of Telegraph Hill and Chaucer’s pilgrims went along the Old Kent Road. This is a Londoner’s book, south of the river going east: brick built and bomb-damaged, with Roman remains, Oyster cards, Green Shield stamps, Keats, O’Hara, John James, Apollinaire, and everywhere unforeseen beauty and wit. I think ‘Honeymoon’ is my favourite, but sometimes I like ‘The Table’ best of all, what do you think?

Tony Lopez

 

Unpublished endorsement:  The impression that this entire book of poems must have been very carefully planned out in advance is not entirely outweighed by the sense that he possibly just made it all up as he went along. Perhaps it doesn’t matter which is the case. If in this book Simon Smith really is just going on his nerve then, shucks, it is a pretty good nerve to be going on.

Matthew Welton

 

Previous review quote:  I, who always urge more severe editing … would not wish to have a page less of this oeuvre … because Smith succeeds in elevating poetry above the poem.

Barry Schwabsky

 

Previous review quote:  Readers looking for imaginatively complex engagements with twenty-first-century Britain should try more ambitious kinds of volume. I recommend Simon Smith's flicker-book sequence Mercury.

Jeremy Noel-Tod

 

Previous review quote:  Extraordinarily intoxicating and quite envy inducing with its quicksilver shifts and inner reflections.

John James

 

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