Jon Stone
School of Forgery
School of Forgery
ISBN:9781784630874
Synopsis
PBS Recommendation. The school of forgery is a singular institution, whose principal teachings concern the volatile relationship between fakery and invention. Both you and I are its alumni, and so is the bandit boiled alive in a cauldron of oil. So are the perpetrators of hoaxes, the writers of pornographic dōjinshi, counterfeiters in love with their teachers and teens who dress up as birds to fight tyranny. Its professors proliferate. Its graduates excel in every field. Its campus is the world.
This book, part prospectus and part fanzine, is made from stolen or borrowed parts – centos and collages, half-rhymes and homophonics, translations and travesties. Equally inspired by manga luminaries like Naoki Urasawa, animation and adventure stories as it is by earlier poets, the natural world and human history, School of Forgery postulates the poem as knock-off, as reclaimed scrap, and most of all as through-and-through fabrication.
Praise for this Book
‘Jon Stone writes angry, beautiful poems which access parts of your mind you didn’t know you had.’ —Luke Kennard
Reviews of this Book
‘The structure of School of Forgery is ingenious and impressively intricate. Its slotting architectures are slit, mortised and battened. (...) I stress-tested their timbre by reading poems aloud and yielded a cadence of genuine feeling within the multifaceted, mega-fabricated, louche architecture.’ —David Morley, Magma
‘These are poems with an edge, or rather, multiple sharp edges, poems as elaborate 'fabrications' challenging conventions of form and voice. This is an inspired, integrated debut, endlessly inventive, with a lively intertextuality and a wide frame of reference. The language is both playful and hard-wrought, words at high voltage, words as collector's items.’ —PBS Selectors' Comments
‘A poet of fantastic inversions.’ —Alison Brackenbury, Poetry London
Praise for Previous Work
‘A poetic style that swaggers through a number of different personae and time periods.’ —Poetry London
‘Stone is well-read, keen of ear and a very, very fine technician, but what wins me over is his divine crankiness.’ —Marcia Menter, Sphinx