Passports for the Journey to the Mad Dam
by John Hughes
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About the Book
Passports for the Journey to the Mad Dam is an uncompromising and startling selection of poems gleaned from almost a decade of Hughes' early output.
Acting as an excavation into restlessness, the poems seem to inhabit a menagerie of vivid daydreams, where life seems fleeting and permanent. As much as the writing is tender in outlook, the poems are equally colloquially savage. The identities and perspectives explored are brave and innocent, forgotten and fearsome, all bearing witness to themes of sex, death, and childhood.
The poet has an eye for the tawdry, an ear for the subtle and brutal, and a heart and soul that brings joy to the mythical, far side of despair, but perhaps his most redeeming quality is that his candour picks over the old bones of poetry so that boundaries, real or imagined, surreal or symbolic, are continuously transgressed.
Acting as an excavation into restlessness, the poems seem to inhabit a menagerie of vivid daydreams, where life seems fleeting and permanent. As much as the writing is tender in outlook, the poems are equally colloquially savage. The identities and perspectives explored are brave and innocent, forgotten and fearsome, all bearing witness to themes of sex, death, and childhood.
The poet has an eye for the tawdry, an ear for the subtle and brutal, and a heart and soul that brings joy to the mythical, far side of despair, but perhaps his most redeeming quality is that his candour picks over the old bones of poetry so that boundaries, real or imagined, surreal or symbolic, are continuously transgressed.
Features & Details
- Primary Category: Poetry
- Additional Categories Literature & Fiction Books
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Project Option: 5×8 in, 13×20 cm
# of Pages: 72 -
Isbn
- Softcover: 9798349826283
- Publish Date: Jun 10, 2025
- Language English
- Keywords Simon Armitage, Hughes, Norway, Oslo, poetry
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About the Creator
John Hughes
Oslo, Norway
John Hughes was born in Colwyn Bay, North Wales, Great Britain in 1970. He has worked as a milkman, landscape gardener, newspaper photographer, occasional proof reader and a fish terminal goods inspector. He currently lives in Oslo, Norway, photographing art and antiques whilst working on his music project Love in Exile. He studied Creative Writing at Manchester Metropolitan University under the guidance of Simon Armitage, Carol Ann Duffy and Michael Schmidt.