Slow Puncture

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21st Century
A01=Miles Burrows
Ageing
Author_Miles Burrows
British
Category=DCC
Category=DCF
Culture
Doctor
Drama
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_poetry
Humour
Observations
Poet
Poetry
Sickness

Product details

  • ISBN 9781800175150
  • Dimensions: 135 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 27 Nov 2025
  • Publisher: Carcanet Press Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Miles burrows, the master of humorous, oddly profound poetic ‘sketches’ and dramas, returns with a new book of what he calls ‘incidental verse’, written in England and abroad, concerned with sickness and ageing as drama, where clinical situations are reflected in a series of vignettes staged between reality and dream.

The poems’ characteristically mordant observations alight on subjects from a child’s death to a shaman performing a ritual ceremony for the journey between Heaven and Earth, or the image of wheelchairs pushed under a tree by the Thai carers in a poem which dwells on how ageing people pass the day in different countries.

Burrows knows that these reminiscences are in danger of falling back on their own material’s natural comedy, like a spider continually struggling to get out of an empty bathtub as one poem’s title has it. In another poem, a moorland pony stuck fast in a bog, sinking, is rescued by a team with a jeep who attach a belt round him and lug him out.

These poems are second thoughts, cartoons, esprits de l’escalier, sybil’s leaves, poems at a tangent, unspoken repartees. Like sketches done in a café by a person absently rubbing his thumb into some spilt coffee...

The poetry of Miles Burrows was discovered in 1966 when Tom Maschler, already an editor at Cape, heard him give a public reading in London. Cape published him. After that, Burrows continued his life in many walks, most of them medical. Having studied Greats at Oxford, he was determined to become an intellectual and learned to smoke black Russian cigarettes, reviewing occasionally for the New Statesman. He worked as a GP and then as a psychiatrist. He was briefly a trawlerman, then a doctor in the New Guinea Highlands, in the American Hospital for Hmong tribe refugees on the Thai-Laos border, in a Catholic mission Hospital in Eastern Taiwan, in the Middle East and in Suffolk.

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