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Tim Dooley

Imagined Rooms

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Biographical note:  Tim Dooley was born in 1951 and grew up in the West Country. He read English at Oxford and has a research MA in Victorian Poetry from the Open University. He has taught English and Film Studies, in schools and in Further Education, in London and Hertfordshire since 1974. He is reviews and features editor of Poetry London and has worked as a creative writing tutor for Arvon, Writers’ Inc and The Poetry School. He has reviewed poetry for the TLS and co-edited the little magazine Green Lines. His first collection, The Interrupted Dream, was published by Anvil in 1985. This was followed by The Secret Ministry (2001) and Tenderness (2004), both winners in the Poetry Business pamphlet competition. Tenderness was also a Poetry Book Society pamphlet choice. Along with Keeping Time, which was a Poetry Book Society recommendation for Winter 2008, Imagined Rooms brings together the poems Tim Dooley wishes to keep from four decades of writing.

 

BIC Basic

EAN13:  9781844717705
ISBN:  9781844717705
Author:  Tim Dooley
Title:  Imagined Rooms
Series:  Salt Modern Poets
Product class:  BC
Language:  eng
Audience:  General/trade
BIC subject category:  DCF
Publisher:  Salt Publishing
Pub date:  15-Sep-10
Extent:  84pp
Height:  198 mm
Width:  129 mm
Thickness:  6 mm
Weight:  126 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:  Imagined Rooms is global in its outlook, making what was once strange or distant immediate and present. It offers a view on a world where there is no place to hide and where, in Dooley’s paraphrase of Jaccottet, the poet’s role is to name and look out for ‘every item left at risk’.

 

Main description:  The poems in Imagined Rooms invite the reader in Philip Gross’s words ‘to take it all in’. Written between the 1970s and the start of the Clinton and Blair era, they display a voracious imagination, a freedom with language and a hard-bitten compassion. A worthy companion to Keeping Time, also published by Salt, Imagined Rooms is global in its outlook, making what was once strange or distant immediate and present. It offers a view on a world where there is no place to hide and where, in Dooley’s paraphrase of Jaccottet, the poet’s role is to name and look out for ‘every item left at risk’.

 

Table of contents:
Contents
A Part of the Main
Homefinding
Level Crossing
Alfoxden 1798 (Problems in Criticism)
Inattention
Person: Tense and Number
32°C
March 19th 1977
Nos Meilleurs Cliches
The Strange Conversions
Eden is Burning
The Hypnopompic State
Impossible Object
A Social Survey
Idealist
Against the Great
Top Floor
A Model for Vermeer
Alison
The Retreat
Cousins
On the Beach
The Old Worship
Above Genoa
In Genoa
'His best piece of poetrie'
Night Shift
Fading Chameleons
Contre-jour
At Laugharne
'Balloons'
Household Words
The Page
A Forbidding Spring
Woman Reading
Heat Haze
The Candidate
The Sound We Make Ourselves
Disturbance
Breakdown
The South
Theale Churchyard
The Rod
1948 (Elephant and Castle)
The Apiarists
For a Country Churchyard
Network
Tidying Up
Without Compulsion
40th Birthday with Cassette Deck and Questions
Memory
The Other
Tact
Working from Home
Nightfall

 

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Excerpt from book:  

The Other

If I said the man
sitting on the bench
in the churchyard
was talking to himself,
this would not be the truth.

The man I saw as I stopped
by the traffic lights
on Wealdstone High Street
at about 10.40 a.m.
on a surprisingly bright
Wednesday in November.

The man with the trilby hat,
the herringbone overcoat
one size too big, and a smart-
seeming scarf in a shade
you might call damson,
was not talking to himself.

He addressed, with animation,
a point at eye-level,
eighteen inches away
from the unshaven chin,
the damson scarf.

His eyes moved quickly,
intelligently, persuasively even,
as he addressed the absence
eighteen inches away
from his blue-veined nose.

He had the air
of a man about to grasp
his invisible companion,
to embrace him,
to explain again to him
there was nothing to fear.

 

Review quote:  Dooley deals with whatever comes – news, memories, encounters, dreams: nothing is out of bounds.

PHILIP GROSS
Poetry Review

 

Review quote:  Dooley seems to me among the handful of writers today trying to work towards a serious, intelligent poetry of the people – something that is neither frivolous verse nor poetry built for the seminar room

PETER SANSOM
Orbis

 

Review quote:  The measured, meditative manner sometimes quickens into a loping inclusiveness of definition, or breaks out in arresting tight-lipped urgencies (including urgent uncertainties) of perception.

CLAUDE RAWSON
TLS

 

Review quote:  Amalgamating poise and intellect with a thoughtful pacing of each poem’s release, Dooley injects his words into their precision mouldings with a characteristically delicate and perceptive pressure.

MARIO PETRUCCI
PBS Bulletin

 

Review quote:  Tim Dooley's Imagined Rooms is for the most part a collection of poems from the late 1970s to the late 1980s. Thirty-five of the fifty-five poems are in Dooley's first collection, The Interrupted Dream. If this is put together with Dooley's critically successful collection of 2008, Keeping Time, the greater part of Dooley's published work is now available from Salt. Twelve of the poems in Imagined Rooms are in a form peculiar to Dooley, which consists of three eight-line stanzas where the lines vary in length, and achieve a shapely configuration to match the twists and turns of Dooley's perception. They shift rapidly between personal, historical and political concerns. Dooley's poems written in the Thatcher era seem exemplary of the defeated liberal consciousness that lived through that time and which was briefly revived at the end of the millennium, only to be defeated again.

James Sutherland Smith
The Bow Wow Shop

 

Review quote:  Tim Dooley’s Imagined Rooms shows how, in a quiet, contained register it’s possible to be both trenchantly personal and – well, trenchantly political. In a personal way. The poems were written in the 70s and 80s — you can feel it in lines like “The Trident is doing its diagonal overhead drone”, or “Optimists of agitprop rehearse in the / co-operative restaurant…”— and, sure enough, it is all feeling strangely prescient now. Or strangely plus ça change.

Katy Evans-Bush
Baroque in Hackney

 

Previous review quote:  Dooley is that rarest of things, both a public and private poet. Whilst other poets might retreat to domestic subject matter to reflect personal or private insight, Dooley does not shrink from big historical moments and demonstrates seamlessly how such moments inform our inner lives. Perhaps what endures most is his fierce poetic defence for, and belief in, the strength of the human spirit, often in the face of oppressive political forces that threaten to engulf the self. The characters in these poems, and one suspects the poet himself, are searching for something that feels more real; as such, much of the poetry in this collection offers an alternative, an escape route from the standardised and artificial. He is not only a poet of our time but a poet that is needed for our times.

CHRISTOPHER HORTON
Eyewear

 

Previous review quote:  Tim Dooley has a wide-ranging literary mind, but the poems are anything but “literary” in effect – their references and details are very much of the here-and-now, their tones extremely contemporary. There is a keen political awareness at work in many pieces. It is what has happened since the 1980s, imbued with its own strange doublespeak, its mood of incomprehension and defeat that Dooley pins down in sketches of lives adrift and hopes under threat. It makes for a poetry of thoughtful, unshowy resonance, that can also be very funny

ALAN JENKINS and EVA SALZMAN
PBS Bulletin

 

Previous review quote:  Dooley’s poems could not be more varied in their line-lengths from long, rolling cadences to ultra-precision. One unifying factor is Dooley’s consistently humane vision and concern for the disaffected and inarticulate. Dooley has argued that the condition of poetry is not soliloquy but “colloquy”, and he makes an implicit case for the underground power of art.

DAVID WHEATLEY
TLS

 

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