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Biographical note: Andrew Pidoux has published poems in the anthologies First Pressings (Faber and Faber) and New Writing 10 (Picador) and stories in two Doctor Who collections for Big Finish. He won an Eric Gregory Award in 1999 and was a Crashaw Prize winner in 2009. Year of the Lion is his first full-length collection of poems. He currently lives in Harlesden in west London.
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EAN13: 9781844717910 ISBN: 9781844717910 Author: Andrew Pidoux Title: Year of the Lion Series: Salt Modern Poets Product class: BC Language: eng Audience: General/trade BIC subject category: DCF Publisher: Salt Publishing Pub date: 01-Nov-10 Extent: 96pp Height: 198 mm Width: 129 mm Thickness: 7 mm Weight: 144 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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description/annotation: The broad array of poems on show in Andrew Pidoux’s Year of the Lion—from wickedly humorous to darkly meditative, from tightly controlled terza rima to loose cascades of ideas and images—attest to a compelling new voice. Drawing inspiration from painters, philosophers, cartoon characters and pop singers, Andrew Pidoux’s poetry is at once accessible and strange, like a public dream.
Main description: Andrew Pidoux’s Year of the Lion is at once accessible and strange, like a public dream. Whether addressing the reader in darkly meditative tones or wickly humerous asides, this widely travelled, art-school educated writer never fails to paint vivid pictures. In the title poem, a society is gripped by a sudden craze for having pet lions. Elsewhere, a mutated frog baby is born in Kansas to an adoring mum and crazed angels spin around the dome of a church “like wisps of wild laundry”. The collection includes many tender portraits of artists, philosophers and writers who each revel in the liberating capabilities of the imagination. Here you will find the unsettling surrealist painter Leonora Carrington, the self-effacing writer Robert Walser and the reality-bending philosophers Deleuze and Guattari, all brought to life in tributes that endeavor to channel their original vividness. Just as often it is unknown or unnamed artists who stake their place alongside the greats in Pidoux’s poems. A gypsy woman “melts into her art” in Playing with Fire, while in The Cove Dweller a would-be writer flips open her laptop “like a limpid secret”. Places too inform this geographically widely spaced collection, though here as elsewhere, Pidoux describes only what the imaginative would see—unreal cities, deserts subjected to mirages and a post-communist seaside resort “locked in sunshine”. Another preoccupation is the animal world, particularly what we can see in it of ourselves. A hunted deer flashes a woman’s face, feral cats are “furred with human fears” while giraffes terrorize the peaceful English countryside. Writing in a wide range of forms from the sonnet to the demanding terza rima, this technically accomplished poet never sacrifices clarity and directness, making this collection both challenging and compulsively readable.
Table of contents: Year of the Lion Butterfly Effect Self Portrait, 1936 Jungle Rites Bedroom Light Moonlight on Montjuic Plan for a Novel Set in Barcelona In the Town of Karow outside Berlin Playtime in the Squat The Wound Protected Species Lost Post-mortem A New Breed of Abuse Moon Tower The Scream Frog Baby Born in Kansas Entrepreneurs The Endless Holiday Between The Ranch Horse American Relic Britannia Three Musicians Night: A Process The Dust Age Rabbit The City of Cats Lone Crab Cotswold Safari Buda Forgotten Babies The Field The Colonel’s Son The Aftermath Shimmer City Pregnant Waitress The Cove Dweller In Bed The Madness of Robert Walser The Weight of a Dream Carnival for Two The Telling Thirteen Innocent Observations The Wounded Deer An Unbelievably Yellow Lion The Gulf of Mexico Give Me Hell The Dead Sheep The Archivist Sirena The Garden of Good Ideas Levitation Sweet Betty Boop Tattoo Lazy Song View excerpt as PDF: Click here to view a sample (148 KB)
Excerpt from book:
Moon Tower
I live on the fifteenth floor Of a tower block the sixties built On a whim of love.
On a clear day you can see The whole of London set out Like a frozen breath —
Tower Bridge, St. Paul’s, Big Ben and Parliament, Stone dripping into the sky.
And at night there are stars Squirming over the river, like fish Cast out and left to sweetly rot.
The moon, from up here, Looks like a small dead god, Packed with cold light.
Some nights I truly believe That I can make the leap Onto its firm face,
Plant my footsteps on its lips, And bending down into gravity, Thaw it with a kiss.
Unpublished endorsement: Year of The Lion pictures a world a little like our own, only more so. The details are skewed, unsettling, larger-than-life, and it would be lazy to call them ‘dreamlike’. These are wide-awake poems, skillfully drawn, brilliantly imagined. Helen Ivory Unpublished endorsement: If we read poetry in the hope of encountering the challengingly unexpected, then Andrew Pidoux is, without a doubt, the real thing. He is already a master of line and phrase, of the imagined and meticulous, the careful and the carefree, the enigmatic but genuine, and, above all, metaphor-forming narrative. He possesses a distinct gift for melodic verse. On the page it looks traditional, but it's too off-beat for that to fit, as in the terza rima of "Three Musicians" or the simple quatrains of some others. His ekphrastic poems (and there are several here, as you would expect from a poet who studied painting and drawing) seem to arise from a strange perception of what lurks, like a secret, behind the image. This is a must-read collection by a new poet. Douglas Dunn |
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