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Biographical note: Jo Colley has compensated for a rootless childhood by living in the north east of England for the last thirty years. A prose writer and poet, she has read her work and spoken word performance pieces in the north east, Liverpool, London and Finland. Her work has been published by Vane Women, Sand and Ek Zuban, and she has been translated into Finnish. In 2007, she received a Northern Promise Award from New Writing North. She has a day job as a content developer for educational software.
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EAN13: 9781844715329 ISBN: 9781844715329 Author: Jo Colley Title: Weeping for the Lovely Phantoms Series: Salt Modern Poets Product class: BC Language: eng Audience: General/trade BIC subject category: CTCH1 Publisher: Salt Publishing Pub date: 01-Apr-09 Extent: 84pp Height: 216 mm Width: 140 mm Thickness: 11 mm Weight: 126 gms Supplier: Gardners Books Supplier: Ingram Book Group Supplier: Inbooks (James Bennett) Availability: NP Price: GBP 8.99 Price: USD 14.95 Rights: World
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description/annotation: A perceptive, challenging journey through the obsessions of a poetic mind, taking the reader across continents of geography and emotion. Stories are told: of the death of Sharon Tate, of a child’s survival, of rural heroes, ill-fated blondes and transformations, of love and its near relatives. Fasten your seat belt and enjoy the ride.
Main description: Miss Havisham, Sharon Tate, the Hitchcock Blonde, the Woman who Became a Sofa: all lovely phantoms with stories to tell. This is poetry that tests the boundaries of acceptable subject matter, exploring obsessions (the Manson Family and the death of Sharon Tate, lovers and daughters, family secrets) and the obsessed (Hitchcock and his leading ladies, Miss Havisham, rural weirdos and local heroes). Here are “still lives” that seem fixed by choice or circumstance, but draw you in to the mystery and ingenuity of the limitless moment. The enviable lives of the rich and famous, movie stars and Beverly Hills residents, are shown to be just as fixed and circumscribed, but a lot less secure.
Transformation or escape is possible, sometimes with the help of a little magic, a criminal act, or the blind leap of faith characteristic of those in love. Not all transformations are to our taste: be careful what you wish for, lovely phantoms.
Table of contents: Transformations Dream on Boro Girl Snow Patrol Goldilocks Remembering Lindisfarne Reprieve Kabuki noh Hansel and Gretel and the Sugar Rush Granny Seven Ways to Leave Your Lover Moving Image Hitchcock Blonde Marnie The Bodega Bay Incident Shadows Bates Motel Welcome to the Hotel Caledonia Homemade dress Accordion Player in Helsinki Harbour Still Lives Rowing on Derwent Water Cherry Picker Things He Knows Haig Street The Miss Havisham Papers Diversification The Woman Who Became a Sofa Cornflowers in a Pot Star Gazing Landscape of Argument East of England Beautiful People Beautiful People Weightless Homecoming Queen Make it a Real Nice Murder Great Looking Chicks Lipstick Traces Factor to the Max 60s Wedding Jay Sebring Beautiful People Abigail Folger Charlie's Angel 1: Susan Atkins Charlie's Angel 2: Patricia Krenwinkle Charlie's Angel 3: Linda Kasabian Wipe Out Weeping for the Lovely Phantoms View excerpt as PDF: Click here to view a sample ( KB)
Excerpt from book:
The Woman Who Became a Sofa
At first I could make it to the store pick up supplies, check out the offers hurry back with my paper sack bulging with goodies. Then, for a while, I was still able to hit the kitchen fry a sandwich, microwave a burger unbox a pie. Over the years, movement became a struggle I couldn’t get up the momentum the interest. But a girl’s got to eat so I called in the welfare. They helped me access the food source fed me like Jumbo in the zoo a bag of buns on the hour a bucket of coke super size fries.
In time I became the sofa. My body fluids soaked the polystyrene: the microfibres met mine and merged, a lingering mystery, like a marriage. Look at me now and wonder: my cushion breasts plush dimpled arms the gentle sigh as you lower yourself into the welcome sink of my lap. I no longer need feeding just a dust with a damp cloth a little plumping to accentuate my best features.
Unpublished endorsement : Jo Colley has no fear of looking into the mirror: her poetry reflecting uncomfortable truths about glamour and sexuality: attraction has a dagger in it somewhere and danger fosters courage and lies. Weeping for the Lovely Phantoms warns of the liability of pain, of an uncle's ‘secret’ that blossoms into a threat, that foreshadows a fascination with film noir and brittle heroines. What is born is the same mischance that brings the assassin, what is misshapen the horror of the Manson Family and the emotional trapdoor under our feet. Her poetry sparkles, fizzes with provocative wit, and drives straight to the edge, to the territory she has made her own. She is a thrilling, audacious poet, her language playful, exotic and rich, and she holds her nerve. S.J. Litherland Unpublished endorsement : Each poem a cinematic journey, storylines, characters, plot, style, atmosphere — music and lighting, but also temperature and smell … such great choice of subject matter, just my cup of coffee — reminds me of Edward Hopper and Joyce Carol Oates, both of whom I love. Francesca Beard Unpublished endorsement : Weeping for the Lovely Phantoms provides us with an intimate theatre in which Jo Colley’s poetic personas can tenderly act out the unpicking of their labyrinthine back-stories. Actually, on reflection, it’s not a theatre, nor a cinema for that matter; it’s more like she’s recreated a claustrophobic front-room or a bed-sit with a tiny little telly firing out a deluge of crackling, strobe-light movies and dark, late-night stories to a legion of insomniacs.
Colley’s poems inhabit recognisable but sometimes distorted landscapes, uneasy landscapes infested with the manifold ghosts of the unresolved and unrequited. Her carefully crafted stage-sets have walls that sweat with the miniscule detail of well-leafed nostalgia of self and family. They have carpets which are sticky with the familiar classicism of pop mythology and the spilled blood of broken hearts. They are both interesting and acutely believable, obsessionally observed and tangibly precise and whether topographical, physiological or emotional, these landscapes are laden with film noir shadows and a hybrid fairytale-hitchcockian menace.
This collection is confession and denial in equal measure — a platform for celebration and lament, songs aof love and hate, it is simple and complex, it is both bravely intimate and sufficiently distant, almost every stanza seems daubed with a suggested menace but her writing is never without a sense of hope; this book is a requiem for the phantoms of our pasts but also a celebratory hymn for a surviving congregation unquestionably wounded by history but remaining stubbornly optimistic.
Colley reports through eyes ‘that know about salt’ and the dynamics of tears and yet she paints a world ‘where hope and disappointment balance the scales’. She strides from the familial and domesticity of autobiography to the popular mythology of Cielo Drive and the Manson Murders or the icons of the glorious technicolor but these supposed tangents never really dislocate the reader’s attention from the fact that this whole collection is a beautifully tender confession, a plea for absolution of sorts or at the very least a worn on the sleeve dialogue of self-awareness. Either way, these are poems that will lodge themselves ‘like nuggets in your throat’. Paul Summers |
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