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Synopsis
Susan Utting's poem Woodwork was highly commended for the Forward Prize Best Single Poem 2006. Woodwork was also 'Poem on Sunday' in the Independent on Sunday "These are intelligent, wittily passionate poems. Susan Utting has an eye for real and telling details, and is adept at employing them to good effect." - David Constantine "Poets are often praised for knowing what to leave out. Susan Utting knows what to leave in. Ordinary things gain an almost hallucinatory vividness in her richly textured poems. Utting animates life’s brittle edges and her poems carry unforced emotional weight." - Moniza Alvi "Susan Utting’s underlying concerns, love, loss, memory and the absence of it, among others, are universal, but she reveals them to us through a world that is unfamiliar, disconcerting and just beyond momentary recognition. Her subtly crafted pieces whisk us into a carnival samba of acrobats, nocturnal topiarists, castanets, pocket knives, splinters of broken china, snatches of rhyme, song, riddle, and long-distance telephone haiku. A stunning book, its disarming, kaleidoscope vision takes the reader into the jumbled interiors of houses without walls, into the heart of what it is to be human." - Anne-Marie Fyfe Today’s Blue Today’s blue’s nothing but turquoise, it does not shift in the light from duck-egg bright to aqua, it is not a patch of sky to mend a sailor’s trousers or the uniform of girls let out in crocodiles, on pre-set routes through Mellor’s Park on Wednesday afternoons. It’s not indelible on children’s tongues, or carbon smudged on sweaty palms and touch-type fingerprints, nor is it jazzy/sad mood indigo for something small you’ll always miss but never really had; today’s blue is a memory of worsted cloth, tacked long and loose, worn inside out, marked white with broken lines of tailor’s chalk. It is a man cross-legged on a table in a backroom; it is not my father, though he’s there and with me and would understand the weft and warp, the mesh of yarn, tight-woven to a blue so dark you’d call it black; that he’d call midnight. Phone Call from a Phone Box on the East Coast And I feel the chill that comes straight from the Steppes to the point where gulls swoop. Phone call from America There’s an echo on the line: your double, asking, after mine’s answered. Noise, Great West Road We knew that it wasn’t the wind, but the sound of the underground train Coming up for the air, over the wall At the end of our area yard. We lived semi-basemented, coal-holed and railinged, at home to the overhead drumming of boots from a neighbour gone Spanish for love; we were snug, huggamug with West Indian weddings, chiropractors and washing-line underwear thieves; with paraffin stoves that caught fire, doorstep shit, corner-shop pregnancies, men who turned out to be women, bottle- fight pubs, one-armed bandits that flashed to the smashing of glass while the landlord kept serving, and we kept on hearing the Underground whooshing, as windrush.
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