BOOKSELLER INFORMATION
Publication Date: 08-Jun-09 | ISBN: 9781844715640 | Trim Size: 216 x 140 mm | Extent: 80pp | Format: Hardback
UK Distribution:
| USA Distribution:
| Publishing Status: Out of print

SYNOPSIS

WINNER OF THE 2011 ERIC GREGORY AWARDS How To Build A City is the Crashaw Prize-winning debut collection of poetry by Tom Chivers. It is a poetic interrogation of the twenty-first century urban experience, drawing on the history, culture, society and topography of London. Chivers takes his cue from radical writers such as Iain Sinclair and Barry MacSweeney to create an impressionist poetry, marked by playful riddling, found texts and unusual juxtapositions. How To Build A City is peopled by ghosts of London’s past as well as the distinctly modern spectres of spam email, international terrorism and the credit crunch.
The title piece is a choppy, sardonic investigation of contemporary East London, a travelogue that never really leaves Liverpool Street Station. Some of the poems are personal accounts of love and loss, including ‘Thom, C & I’, a long sequence of lyrical fragments cut from a diary written by the poet’s mother. Other poems take the reader away from the city to the fenlands of Medieval East Anglia, apple-heavy Himalayan gardens and the bleak uplands of Northern England.
How To Build A City captures the mood of a fluctuating, unstable metropolis that is continually coming to terms with multiple and conflicting identities.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Part I; Tube; This is yogic; Citizen; Rush Hour; Tina is a Rottweiler; Seven Varieties of Knot; Stopping Doctor Syntax; Queer Things in Egypt; The Coder; Your Name Has Been Randomly Selected; Big Skies over Docklands; The Trial of Margery; Shaikh and the Fruit Pickle; Invasion; A Tourist’s Guide to the East End; Hasty Excise; Fifteen Days; How To Build A City; Part II; Snapshot; Iconic; Marpha; Newborn; Guthlac; The Voyages of Ottar and Wulfstan; On Kinder Scout; Shatton, Kinder; Working in Stone; Postmark Tullamore; Photographs; Paramnesiac; Thom, C and I
PRAISE FOR THIS BOOK
“Tom Chivers’ debut collection excites with its loose and fiery language play. Beneath the linguistic fireworks lurks a steely vision of London past and present that is contemporary, inventive and substantial.” —David Caddy
“With How To Build A City Tom Chivers has created a rich and challenging collection that reflects all that is beautiful and disturbing in the city. These poems speak civic rhythms; they mimic the sway and staccato motion of the city. Poems like ‘Seven Varieties of Knot’ and ‘The Trial of Margery’ also show how precise and technically adept Chivers is as a poet; with ‘T, C & I’ and ‘How To Build A City’ he shows an experimental and innovative flair with language and form. But this is also a personal work; a human text. Poems such as ‘Postmark Tullamore’ and ‘Photographs’ are deeply moving as well as unsettling. This is an ambitious and brave collection from a poet with a distinctive voice, one which will deepen our understanding of the city that lives in us.” —Anthony Joseph
PRAISE FOR PREVIOUS BOOKS
“Dark London history, dredged and interrogated, spits and fizzes with corrosive wit. Language-receipts sustain the necessary illusion. IT MATTERS. It matters: the weight and pace of delivery, the balance of breath. Tom Chivers understands the risks he risks, the play in a taught rope. ‘I'll ghost-write, if you ask.” —Iain Sinclair
“Tom Chivers has a striking, individual voice and a powerful one.” —Patricia Prime NHI Review
“Tom Chivers’ sardonic wit created a sense of a London which was always out to crap on his shoulder.” —George Ttoouli Gists & Piths
BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
Tom Chivers was born in London in 1983. A writer, editor and promoter, he is Director of Penned in the Margins, Co-Director of London Word Festival and Associate Editor of Tears in the Fence. He was Poet in Residence at The Bishopsgate Institute, London. A limited edition sequence entitled The Terrors was published by Nine Arches Press in 2009. How To Build A City is his first full collection.