Trending Bestseller

Last Morning

Simon Smith

No reviews yet Write a Review
Paperback / softback
01 January 2022
$39.00
Ships in 3-5 business days
Hurry up! Current stock:

It's not only that Simon Smith captures like no one else the new rhythms of attention and distraction that have emerged over the last decade. In Last Morning he writes a poetry of pace that seems to walk down the page, often in little three-line clusters, creating meandering journeys that casually scramble the internal and external surfaces they negotiate. At once transcendental and grounded, these poems are intensely of their place and moment. Smith's audible dialogue with American poets like O'Hara, Spicer, and Peter Gizzi does nothing to stop him from being an ambassador of how Britain feels today to the hypothetical North American reader. These poems will walk with you. -Daniel Katz


Reading Simon's Smith's nimble poems is not so different than riding a roller coaster built inside a pinball machine, where "space is a cube not a square." Everything you bump up against is real, as the poems pivot from one sight (and site) to another "tent on the edge of town." The reader is always being pulled along - by "song after song" full of "vital signs" from the "return of the World" to "scent is presence/welcomed to night." Smith refolds the border between out there and in here in different and surprising ways. In Last Morning, he is open and alert to the "sun's hum," while knowing "the mirror swallows this side of the World." And the "song [gets] made up as it goes along." -John Yau


In these new poems, Simon Smith operates as a kind of lyric focus puller on the world, bringing not just image into relief but sound too. Is it rain or ruin, whiteness or witness, threat or throat? It matters. There's an ethics of seeing and hearing at work here that depends on a precision of word choice However, these poems do not shy away from the big concepts like Truth (it's blue broad daylight), Being (it's in the saying) or Love (yeah yeah yeah) which are themselves constantly tested through the particular acts of poem-making. Consequently, this is a poetry of intense material presences, recalling what Hans Vaihinger called "the philosophy of as if" where the poem is the sound of a fountain clapping, where the image before what is said is song, where the future constantly awaits arrival. "Who will dice the dice" asks Smith at one point - "answer that answer." Answer echo. Answer under erasure. Answers by a thread. -Jeff Hilson


With one ear to the rumbling background of the news, Simon Smith's Last Morning turns the other to the urgency of song, its flickering constructions of 'I' and 'you', passing birds and unicorns. Sound and syntax are kept delicately on the point of slippage so that the reader's ear is constantly retuned, as in the simile that could be a smile reassembled. The magnetic pull of lyric is often a process of misreading or mishearing, a hallucinatory double take on the point of sliding into dream. While these poems carry the reader into waves of ocean or sound 'like radio code / for a provisional miracle', they are wholly alert to phenomena, forging connections between what might exist and the more-than-human world that already does. Last morning it may be, but everything rings as if it's the first. -Zoe Skoulding


Simon Smith has published nine collections of poetry. His third, Mercury (Salt Publications), was long-listed for the Costa Prize in 2007. A selected poems, More Flowers Than You Could Possibly Carry, appeared from Shearsman Books in 2016, and his latest books are Municipal Love Poems (Muscaliet Press) and Day In Day Out (Parlor Press).


This product hasn't received any reviews yet. Be the first to review this product!

$39.00
Ships in 3-5 business days
Hurry up! Current stock:

Last Morning

$39.00

Description

It's not only that Simon Smith captures like no one else the new rhythms of attention and distraction that have emerged over the last decade. In Last Morning he writes a poetry of pace that seems to walk down the page, often in little three-line clusters, creating meandering journeys that casually scramble the internal and external surfaces they negotiate. At once transcendental and grounded, these poems are intensely of their place and moment. Smith's audible dialogue with American poets like O'Hara, Spicer, and Peter Gizzi does nothing to stop him from being an ambassador of how Britain feels today to the hypothetical North American reader. These poems will walk with you. -Daniel Katz


Reading Simon's Smith's nimble poems is not so different than riding a roller coaster built inside a pinball machine, where "space is a cube not a square." Everything you bump up against is real, as the poems pivot from one sight (and site) to another "tent on the edge of town." The reader is always being pulled along - by "song after song" full of "vital signs" from the "return of the World" to "scent is presence/welcomed to night." Smith refolds the border between out there and in here in different and surprising ways. In Last Morning, he is open and alert to the "sun's hum," while knowing "the mirror swallows this side of the World." And the "song [gets] made up as it goes along." -John Yau


In these new poems, Simon Smith operates as a kind of lyric focus puller on the world, bringing not just image into relief but sound too. Is it rain or ruin, whiteness or witness, threat or throat? It matters. There's an ethics of seeing and hearing at work here that depends on a precision of word choice However, these poems do not shy away from the big concepts like Truth (it's blue broad daylight), Being (it's in the saying) or Love (yeah yeah yeah) which are themselves constantly tested through the particular acts of poem-making. Consequently, this is a poetry of intense material presences, recalling what Hans Vaihinger called "the philosophy of as if" where the poem is the sound of a fountain clapping, where the image before what is said is song, where the future constantly awaits arrival. "Who will dice the dice" asks Smith at one point - "answer that answer." Answer echo. Answer under erasure. Answers by a thread. -Jeff Hilson


With one ear to the rumbling background of the news, Simon Smith's Last Morning turns the other to the urgency of song, its flickering constructions of 'I' and 'you', passing birds and unicorns. Sound and syntax are kept delicately on the point of slippage so that the reader's ear is constantly retuned, as in the simile that could be a smile reassembled. The magnetic pull of lyric is often a process of misreading or mishearing, a hallucinatory double take on the point of sliding into dream. While these poems carry the reader into waves of ocean or sound 'like radio code / for a provisional miracle', they are wholly alert to phenomena, forging connections between what might exist and the more-than-human world that already does. Last morning it may be, but everything rings as if it's the first. -Zoe Skoulding


Simon Smith has published nine collections of poetry. His third, Mercury (Salt Publications), was long-listed for the Costa Prize in 2007. A selected poems, More Flowers Than You Could Possibly Carry, appeared from Shearsman Books in 2016, and his latest books are Municipal Love Poems (Muscaliet Press) and Day In Day Out (Parlor Press).


Customers Also Viewed

Buy Books Online at BookLoop

Discover your next great read at BookLoop, Australiand online bookstore offering a vast selection of titles across various genres and interests. Whether you're curious about what's trending or searching for graphic novels that captivate, thrilling crime and mystery fiction, or exhilarating action and adventure stories, our curated collections have something for every reader. Delve into imaginative fantasy worlds or explore the realms of science fiction that challenge the boundaries of reality. Fans of contemporary narratives will find compelling stories in our contemporary fiction section. Embark on epic journeys with our fantasy and science fiction titles,

Shop Trending Books and New Releases

Explore our new releases for the most recent additions in romance books, fantasy books, graphic novels, crime and mystery books, science fiction books as well as biographies, cookbooks, self help books, tarot cards, fortunetelling and much more. With titles covering current trends, booktok and bookstagram recommendations, and emerging authors, BookLoop remains your go-to local australian bookstore for buying books online across all book genres.

Shop Best Books By Collection

Stay updated with the literary world by browsing our trending books, featuring the latest bestsellers and critically acclaimed works. Explore titles from popular brands like Minecraft, Pokemon, Star Wars, Bluey, Lonely Planet, ABIA award winners, Peppa Pig, and our specialised collection of ADHD books. At BookLoop, we are committed to providing a diverse and enriching reading experience for all.