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Dear Alice Tom Pow

Dear Alice By Tom Pow

Dear Alice by Tom Pow


$10,39
Condition - Very Good
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Summary

In Dear Alice - Narratives of Madness, Tom Pow explores the dangerous territory of the imagination. Using the archive of a famous nineteenth century lunatic asylum, he creates powerful story-poems that question and explore divisions between sanity and madness, power and powerlessness.

Dear Alice Summary

Dear Alice: Narratives of Madness by Tom Pow

Tom Pow's powerful new collection of poetry explores the imaginative legacy of a nineteenth-century lunatic asylum, the Crichton, drawing on the richly-documented history of the site. This remarkable book includes the sequence `Resistances' gathered from female patients' notes, but Pow brings many others within his compass: Nebuchadnezzar, Tom Thumb, Peter Pan, Charcot (Master of Salpetriere, the female asylum in Paris, `that great emporium of human misery'), all make an appearance, as do Freud and the Wolf Man. The Crichton Lunatic Asylum was at the forefront of the great nineteenth century European-wide `trade in lunacy' - a period when old assurances were crumbling and our modern sense of the permeability of identity was being formed.

Dear Alice Reviews

A special attraction of Tom Pow's poems is they achieve lucidity without dissolving into simplicity and a decorum which has nothing to do with gentility. They say what they say with aesthetic as well as human tact, and present experiences without inflating them or diminishing them. In other words, with truth.

-- Norman MacCaig

... his firm sombre draughtsmanship is masterly...Also he has the gift - very rare - of compressing what could be a full-length novel into a poem of about fifty lines that leaves a Tchechovian after-pang.

-- George Mackay Brown * The Scotsman *

... a highly impressive first collection. The assured technique, the distinctive voice and the mature vision are the qualities of a poet who is confident of his powers...Pow has a command of imagery and diction that allow him to conjure up a sense of place, and with it that compound of atmosphere and mood and tone, with apparent effortlessness...combines a disciplined passion for the truth of experience with a delight in the art of poetry.

-- James Aitchison * The Glasgow Herald *

This is not an easy or comfortable book: like the rough seas of the title it is entirely readable but always cut with integral unpredictability; like all good seas, that's where the magic lies. The poem, Rough Seas: Three Postcards, highlights the essences: `...for some people Rough Seas can never be/ metaphorical: nor words enshrine their pain': Tom Pow comes close.

-- Tom Nairn * The Scottish Literary Journal *

... has a raw directness that doesn't let the reader out of his grip. His poetry is rich in texture, full of the sights and sounds of the world, the little things of life, and a genuine sympathy which supplies a truly human touch.

-- Joy Hendry * The Glasgow Herald *

This book has a freshness and vigour that have been gifted to a poet who by his technique is able to capture them in significant images...I have been most impressed by this book, by its natural imagery, and its human insight... Sometimes I sense the generous shade of Heaney behind the poems, but Pow has well learned any lessons the master may have taught him. His formal control is masterly, his imagery clear and colourful ...

-- Iain Crichton Smith * The Scotsman *

I was aware of a mind exploring further, searching for, rather than settling for definitive answers. One of the generous strengths of his work, its accumulating power at this early stage of his career, is that he permits his readers to join him in these explorations and share with him the learning and the daring that is involved.

-- Hayden Murphy * Lines Review *

This really is an outstanding collection. I know that in the quiet grove of Poetics, superlatives are relatively common; but The Moth Trap captures and justifies them all.

-- John Glenday * Northlight *

With a swashbuckling relish for language, and an intense lyricism allied to delicacy of phrase, Tom Pow's new poems daringly set events of global significance against moments of startling intimacy, and the vulnerability of childbirth. Masterly evocations of landscape, from Scotland to South America and the Arctic, retain a sense of mystery, a still centre; triumphantly confirming his advocacy of harmony and humanity, and the `symmetry of love', in the face of the howling world surrounding us.

-- Stewart Conn

Pow earns his large conclusions about mortality, love, fear and sacrifice, by giving us the process behind them ... This simplicity is never lazy, it is born of effort. Red Letter Day is a very fine collection indeed.

-- Robyn Marsack * Scotland on Sunday *

... a thoughtful, occasionally brooding and clever gathering of poems which pulls the political into our laps and takes the personal to a wider stage.

-- Rosemary Goring * Scotland on Sunday, Books of the Year *

This is a fine and powerful collection, with virtually everything in it alive to the sounds, smells, noises and ironies of life. And Pow responds to life by embracing it fully.

-- Jim Burns * Ambit *

Tom Pow's poetry goes from strength to strength...What is impressive is not that he makes [these] foreign settings seem exotic, but that he can make a birchwood in Fife or snowdrops in Edinburgh seem just as exotic and make the prairie or the jungle seem just as immediate.

-- Robin Bell * Books in Scotland *

... full of good things, vivid and direct things, things to shock us. He is not afraid to be harsh. His virtue is a sort of fever of awareness - he thinks with his veins and his nerves.

-- Robert Nye * The Scotsman *

Red Letter Day is as good a collection of poetry as I've read by anyone Scottish - dammit anyone at all - in a long time ... an enviably assured book of poetry from one of the most accomplished Scots writing today.

-- Dennis O'Donnell * Cencrastus *

On Landscapes: A beautifully produced book of poetry and art.

-- Edwin Morgan

Tom Pow's new collection shows his usual gift for evoking a great variety of landscapes with precision and atmosphere. But these are essentially `landscapes with figures', and the human element, rich in reference to fathers and mothers, children, love and bereavement, has an immediacy and clarity that will appeal to many readers. And notably, the pleasures of mushroom-picking and crab-catching and cherry-wolfing are not allowed to oust the darker themes of foot-and-mouth and phosphorus bombs in south-west Scotland.

-- Edwin Morgan

The book is a love poem to the world - a declaration of love to the storied world, the light and the dark world, the gone world. It even imbues death with a kind of burning hope and life. It has a rare and infectious freshness in its vision, a seeing that is always a combination of joy and apprehensiveness. I particularly loved the long poems, muscular and spatial. I found Landscapes and Legacies beautiful, grave and moving.

-- Ali Smith

There is a wistful energy about this collection, captured in writing even more honed than that of his previous work.

-- Rosemary Goring * The Herald *

These are wonderfully lucid poems, full of humanity...Pow is regarded as one of Scotland's finest poets - and it shows in this brave collection.

-- Harry Mead * The Northern Echo *

With taut economy, turns of phrase arresting and compelling and an ear for weighing words, Pow's variety and empathy with his material are laudable, lyrical things. This is a poignant, subtle and humane book.

-- Peggy Hughes * Scotland on Sunday *

Pow is not constrained by the specialised material, including artworks and annual reports from the asylum. Rather, he combines this with his own fantasy narratives and contemporary observations...There is often a literal descriptive level at which these poems operate...but on the meta-level there is a text that raises far wider questions, many of them finding obvious echoes in today's news pages.

-- Keith Bruce * The Herald *

Behind the voices of observers, witnesses, inmates, wardens, and the stark or tender stories, it is the poet's own voice which finds exact words to let in light.

-- J.B. Pick * Markings *

Pow's vision is both lucid and complex, his treatments sympathetic but judicious, his executions the work of a very deft hand. What you encounter as a reader in Dear Alice is complicity to a point that never trespasses upon realism. Understanding, you are reminded, is only anything like truth within the cell walls of the Self. And madness has a logic very like your own. Read Dear Alice first because it's beautiful, but read it also to learn more about yourself.

-- Stephen Lackaye * The Edinburgh Review *

The elegance and sensitivity makes this sequence [Resistances] the highlight of Dear Alice. When it comes to describing insanity, poetry, it transpires, is a deeply sympathetic medium: the negotiation between words and meanings, the unexpected connections and curious juxtapositions; in life these are marks of madness, but in poetry, they become art.

-- Sarah Crown * The Times Literary Supplement *

This collection is all the stronger for its quiet but clear tone, sometimes with an awareness of potential comedy, but always with respect, finding the exact detail which reveals or gets to the heart of things.

-- Daisy McKenzie * Northwords Now *

[Pow] has captured the imagined speech and thoughts of patients, and treats them with warmth, empathy and great humanity. That's a major accomplishment in itself, but the quality of the poems takes his achievement to a higher level. They are wonderfully realised individual pieces, and the writing is exceptional.

-- Colin Will * Scottish Poetry Library's Poetry Reader *

Tom has captured the imagined speech and thoughts of patients, and treats them with warmth, empathy and great humanity. That's a major accomplishment in itself, but the quality of the poems takes his achievement to a higher level. They are wonderfully realised individual pieces, and the writing is exceptional.

-- Colin Will

About Tom Pow

Tom Pow has won three Scottish Arts Council Book Awards for his poetry and one for his children's writing. He has also written a travel book and written radio dramas. From 2001 to 2003 he was the first writer in residence at the Edinburgh International Book Festival and in 2005 was Poet in Residence at StAnza, Scotland's Poetry Festival. He has taught in Edinburgh, London, Madrid and Dumfries. He teaches at Glasgow University, Crichton Campus in Dumfries, where he is a Senior Lecturer in creative writing and storytelling. In 2007, he received a Creative Scotland Award.

Table of Contents

Prelude

Inauguration

Song for M

Nebuchadnezzar in the Arboretum by Moonlight

From Foucault: Two Tales and a Bedlam Ballad

1. Appetite

2. The Wise Farmer

3. Glass

Tom Thumb Visits the Crichton Institution for Lunatics

23 February 1845

Nightwatch, 1842

The Last Vision of Angus McKay

Field Notes

The Buoy-Tree

Tryst

Landfall

Charcot, Master of Salpetriere, Delivers his `Tuesday Lecture' at the Crichton

August 1879

The Arch of Hysteria

Questions of Judgement

Deirdre

The Wolf Man at Crichton Hall, 1914

A Dream Before Battle

Service Patient, 1916

Dear Alice

Inmates

Nurses

Freud at the Crichton

September 1939

The Gardeners

Grass

1. The Weaver

2. The Iceman

3. Rashin-Coatie

Ex-Laundry Girl, 1943

The Ghost Pitch

Resistances

1. `each duty commands its own song'

2. `because you dig the garden'

3. `home has lost our touch'

4. `I watch'

5. `how many steps in any direction'

6. `you make a bargain with the world'

7. `to remain yourself deny yourself'

8. `lost soul there is a world'

coda

The Great Asylums of Scotland

Notes

Don Quixote

Additional information

GOR001843344
9781844714162
1844714160
Dear Alice: Narratives of Madness by Tom Pow
Used - Very Good
Hardback
Salt Publishing
20080214
96
Winner of Scottish Mortgage Investment Trust Book Awards (Poetry) 2009 (UK)
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - Dear Alice