About the Book
Morocco, a place of ragged, ravenous, and cruel heat mirages, where the wind shapes the sand into knives, serves as the setting for this poetic reportage to the North African country.
Hughes has created an mosaic of travelogue poems that prowl, reach, and cool. His intent is to be an emissary, or a casbah companion, sparring with the scratched ugliness of the medina's charade, as the sky rains down with a bundles of money attitude that preys on tourists.
The language cuts the twilight’s murky what-if riddles of the watcher and the watched, imbuing nightfall with timeless engravings. Hercules may be chained to a rock in a cave, his haemoglobin broiling in his eyes; the beggar with stumps for arms and legs, be medievally destitute, but the poems are there, exerting and untangling.
For Hughes, a deserted night club’s leaves may seem like fallen bats, a swimming pool at sunrise be tranquilly redolent with cobalt or a human face bubbling with large dilated eyes.
‘nose-diving, waterproof sun
making the perfect plunging arc,
navigating slowly past the ponderous saline grave,
heading for a rendezvous with darkness,
the terminus of solitude,
with a passport of dejection and reprisals.’
Extract from Railway Station: a Penchant, Passport, Platform, No Reason
The poems are rattling trains, their humming lines tempered by the world’s diurnal cycles. If you choose to journey past the door of Room Twelve, you will find confetti sunshine playing on the lyric sheet of the mind, and the timbre of memories ripe with zestful urgency.
Hughes has created an mosaic of travelogue poems that prowl, reach, and cool. His intent is to be an emissary, or a casbah companion, sparring with the scratched ugliness of the medina's charade, as the sky rains down with a bundles of money attitude that preys on tourists.
The language cuts the twilight’s murky what-if riddles of the watcher and the watched, imbuing nightfall with timeless engravings. Hercules may be chained to a rock in a cave, his haemoglobin broiling in his eyes; the beggar with stumps for arms and legs, be medievally destitute, but the poems are there, exerting and untangling.
For Hughes, a deserted night club’s leaves may seem like fallen bats, a swimming pool at sunrise be tranquilly redolent with cobalt or a human face bubbling with large dilated eyes.
‘nose-diving, waterproof sun
making the perfect plunging arc,
navigating slowly past the ponderous saline grave,
heading for a rendezvous with darkness,
the terminus of solitude,
with a passport of dejection and reprisals.’
Extract from Railway Station: a Penchant, Passport, Platform, No Reason
The poems are rattling trains, their humming lines tempered by the world’s diurnal cycles. If you choose to journey past the door of Room Twelve, you will find confetti sunshine playing on the lyric sheet of the mind, and the timbre of memories ripe with zestful urgency.
Features & Details
- Primary Category: Poetry
- Additional Categories Literature & Fiction
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Project Option: 5×8 in, 13×20 cm
# of Pages: 64 -
Isbn
- Softcover: 9798347499564
- Publish Date: Jan 10, 2025
- Language English
- Keywords Simon Armitage, Hughes, Morocco, 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.