Plastiglomerate finds our world in the midst of environmental disaster: from plastic pollution and wrecked shipping to fires in the Amazon rainforest. Geographer-poet Tim Cresswell writes with the forensic eye of a professional, bending the hard vocabulary of science into a jagged but compelling lyric that telescopes from the vast to the cellular in the space of a line. Plastiglomerate completes a trilogy of poetry books that examines mankind's impact on the earth; its central poem recycles the British folk ballad 'The Twa Magicians' to make an ecological protest song fit for the Anthropocene age. But among powerful depictions of the natural world under threat - from beached whales to lost birds - it is the humanity of Cresswell's imagery that wins through: leaf-blowers in surgical masks, blue nail polish, the biro 'leaking in the heat of my pocket'. 'Engaging and unsettling poems that tell it like it is, looking unflinchingly at environmental beauty and disaster. There is redemption here too, in the warmth of human relationships - while this is indeed a world of 'ruin and plunder', it is also a place 'full of love and sap'. A powerful and memorable collection.' - Jean Sprackland
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Product Details
Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
Publication Date: 08 Jun 2020
Publisher: Penned in the Margins
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781908058768
About Tim Cresswell
Tim Cresswell is a geographer and poet. He is the author or editor of over a dozen books on themes of place and mobility including most recently Maxwell Street: Writing and Thinking Place (University of Chicago Press 2019). His poems are widely published on both sides of the Atlantic including in The Rialto Poetry Wales Magma the Moth LemonHound and Salamander. His two previous collections of poetry Soil (2013) and Fence (2015) were both published by Penned in the Margins. He co-edits the interdisciplinary journal GeoHumanities and is the first Visiting Professor at the Centre for Place Writing at Manchester Metropolitan University Tim lives and works in Edinburgh where he is Ogilvie Professor of Geography at the University of Edinburgh.